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From YouTube: GitHub Satellite India 2021 - Open Source Day 1
Description
A community connected by code.
Join us virtually for two days dedicated to celebrating India’s developer community. Expect announcements from GitHub leaders, hands-on workshops, and inspiring performances by artists who code.
Discover regional open source projects built and maintained by your peers.
https://githubsatellite.com
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B
Hello,
everybody
and
thank
you
for
being
here
for
the
first
ever
github
satellite
india.
I
so
wish.
I
could
be
there
with
you
in
person
today,
but
I'm
delighted
to
be
joining
you
from
our
office
here
in
san
francisco
and
you're,
actually
the
first
folks
to
get
to
see
our
beautiful
new
remodel.
So
thank
you
for
being
here
with
us
today.
B
B
On
election
day.
Thousands
of
india's
best
tech
minds
came
together
to
create
a
technology
solution
to
solve
this
problem
on
github
and
we're
so
proud
of
the
work
that
is
still
being
done
to
support
this
important
effort.
It's
been
an
incredible
year
and
that's
thanks
to
all
of
you
and
the
passion,
innovation
and
creativity
that
you
bring
to
the
github
platform
every
single
day.
So,
let's
take
a
quick
look.
At
the
last
year
in
review.
B
In
the
last
year
alone,
more
than
1.8
million
developers
have
joined
github.
The
developer
community
in
india
now
totals
5.8
million
developers
strong
together,
you've
created
7.3
million
repositories
in
the
last
year.
That's
81
more
than
the
year
before
think
of
the
potential
of
all
of
these
new
projects.
B
The
number
of
contributions
commits
issues,
gifts,
prs
team
discussions
increased
by
75
in
india
and
that's
compared
to
about
40
of
the
rest
of
the
world
in
public
open
source
repositories.
Specifically,
the
number
of
contributors
increased
by
80
percent
over
the
previous
year
and
most
strikingly,
a
million
developers
in
india
created
their
first
repository
on
github
this
year,
that's
equivalent
to
a
developer
in
india,
creating
their
first
repo
on
github
every
30
seconds
throughout
the
year,
a
million
developers
creating
their
first
repo
wow.
B
All
of
these
numbers
mean
that
india
is
the
fastest
growing
country
in
the
world
in
terms
of
developers
contributing
to
open
source.
This
is
incredible
and
we're
grateful
that
so
many
of
you
put
your
trust
in
github.
After
all,
as
we
say
at
github,
the
open
source
community
is
incredibly
interconnected
in
the
coming
years.
B
B
C
C
Open
source
is
like
a
community
and
for
us
community
is
our
own
family.
Mexico
lives
where
it's
community
live,
that
is
on
getter
magazine
growth
over
the
past
two
years
is
very
much
attributed
to
our
wonderful
community
around
the
world.
Getup
is
not
just
a
code
hosting
platform
for
us.
It's
more
like
a
place
where
our
community
feels
like
home
github.
Is
that
one
umbrella
which
has
kept
our
community
together
fostered
easy
collaboration
and
helped
to
access
our
project
growth
through
data-driven
analytics.
C
B
B
B
Chica
and
the
countless
other
developers
like
her
in
india
who
are
embracing
these
qualities
are
actually
lowering
the
barrier
of
entry
for
new
developers
to
open
source.
This
is
going
to
be
a
huge
contributor
to
the
growth
of
open
source
in
india
and
by
the
way
sheikh
is
presenting
on
a
panel
shortly
after
this
keynote.
So
I
hope
you'll
join
and
listen
to
what
she
has
to
say.
B
An
individual
developer
has
the
potential
to
have
an
exponential
impact
on
the
community
and
on
tech
innovation.
Overall,
last
year
we
launched
the
github
stars
program
as
a
way
to
recognize,
highlight
and
elevate
the
work
of
contributors
who
go
above
and
beyond,
to
build
and
contribute
to
healthy
and
thriving
open
source
communities.
B
B
All
of
them
are
passionate
about
collaboration
and
growing
the
open
source
community
and
produce
great
content
to
share
their
knowledge
with
others.
We're
looking
forward
to
adding
more
developers
in
india
to
the
github
stars
program
so
that
we
can
all
benefit
from
their
experience
and
their
perspective
stories
like
sheikahs,
nish,
karshas,
santosh's
and
beneath
and
the
millions
of
other
developers
who
found
their
passion
in
open
source
are
truly
inspiring.
B
That
benefits
us
all
and,
as
we
all
know,
many,
if
not
most
developers
do
not
get
to
work
on
open
source
as
their
primary
occupation,
but
the
open
source
work
you're
doing
is
essential
and
we
want
to
do
more
to
support
some
of
the
key
projects
being
built
by
developers
in
india
so
to
support
and
make
possible
more
great
work
by
the
open
source
community.
Here
in
india,
I
am
delighted
to
announce
the
github
india
open
source
grants
program.
B
Now,
let's
talk
more
about
what
businesses
here
in
india
are.
Building
enterprises
in
india
are
at
the
leading
edge
of
innovation
and
as
they
grow,
they
continue
to
have
greater
and
more
complex
needs.
They're.
Looking
for
more
automation,
better
integrations
and
streamline
workflows
that
empower
their
development
teams
to
do
their
best
work
as
an
integrated
part
of
the
open
source
community
github
is
proud
to
serve
the
next
generation
of
developers,
whether
they're
in
the
enterprise
or
at
up-and-coming
startups,
as
they
scale.
B
Many
of
the
largest
and
most
demanding
organizations
on
the
planet
rely
on
github
to
be
fast,
efficient,
reliable
and
secure.
We
invest
heavily
in
our
enterprise,
offering
and
in
less
than
a
year,
we've
seen
more
than
a
three
times
increase
in
adoption
of
github
enterprise
by
businesses
based
here
in
india.
B
India
has
the
largest
number
of
unicorns
outside
the
u.s
and
china,
and
these
are
companies
that
have
complex
needs.
They
have
certifications
and
regulations
to
comply
with
huge
amounts
of
data
to
protect
and
tons
of
technologies
and
systems
to
integrate.
As
a
startup
founder
myself,
I
know
how
important
that,
having
access
to
the
right
tools,
processes
and
support
can
be,
and
it's
key
to
keeping
your
business
growing
at
maximum
velocity
inmobi
is
one
of
these
fast
growing
companies
and
they've
joined
us
today
to
talk
a
little
bit
about
their
experience.
D
Hi,
I'm
rohit
chatter
pt
in
movie
marketing
cloud.
The
first
indian
unicorn
startup
team
is
an
in-app
advertising
platform
for
the
digital
marketers,
who
are
looking
for
hyper
growth.
The
one-stop
shop
from
our
techniques,
the
engineering
team
at
in
moby,
with
400
plus
engineers,
are
constantly
working
on
the
cutting-edge
technology
and
challenging
the
status
quo
and
constantly
innovating
at
the
heart
of
this
is
github.
D
B
Thanks
rohit,
now,
let's
hear
from
a
young
company,
that's
relying
on
github
to
provide
the
best
possible
experience
to
its
developers.
Udon
is
a
unicorn
startup.
That's
bringing
manufacturers,
traders,
retailers
and
wholesalers
together
into
one
platform
for
enterprise
commerce,
they're
using
automation.
B
E
Hi,
I'm
kaushik.
I
had
software
engineering
and
application
development
at
quran
when
a
new
engineer
comes
on
board.
He
already
is
aware
of
github,
so
from
an
onboarding
standpoint
from
understanding
a
tool
standpoint
that
has
already
been
taken
care
of,
purely
because
of
the
kind
of
reach
that
github
has
github
has
been
doing
over
the
years.
Is
it's
been
able
to
think
of
developer
workflows?
And
how
do
you
end
up
optimizing?
E
E
Github
actions
enables
us
to
plug
in
various
kinds
of
linter
tools
that
can
actually
help
in
automating.
Some
of
these.
You
know
pr
reviews,
for
example,
that
need
to
happen
and
at
some
point
in
time,
depending
upon
the
quality
of
that
code,
auto
push
into
a
build
pipeline,
thus
optimizing
our
ci
cd
right
having
that
much
more
time
for
the
engineers
to
focus
on
the
real
problems,
while
the
ones
which
are
repetitive,
which
a
lot
of
engineers
see
as
interrupts
right
being
taken
away
from
them.
B
We
want
to
support
these
startups,
whether
they're
early
on
in
their
journey
or
are
taking
off
after
finding
product
market
fit.
Last
year,
along
with
our
investment
partners,
we
ran
a
pilot
of
a
startup
program
to
offer
github's
full
enterprise
platform
to
startups
in
india.
The
program
was
a
huge
success
with
over
200
startups
participating.
B
Those
companies
are
doing
incredible
things.
Kowa
space
is
building
a
solution
to
solve
the
geospatial
requirements
of
tech
companies.
Clearquote
is
creating
an
ai,
led
automation,
app
for
vehicle
inspections
and
air
meet
is
bringing
people
together,
which
is
more
important
this
year
than
ever
before.
By
providing
a
platform
for
hosting
virtual
events,
it
is
an
honor
to
be
just
a
tiny
part
in
the
grow
stories
of
these
companies,
and
we
know
that
there
are
so
many
more
exciting
startups
out
there.
B
B
The
student
population
in
india
is
incredible
in
its
size
and
depth
and
we
are
fortunate
to
be
partnering
with
so
many
great
universities
across
the
country.
In
the
last
year
alone.
We've
added
more
than
a
hundred
higher
education
institutions
to
github's
educational
program,
which
is
supported
by
74
campus
experts
during
our
launch
last
year,
I
was
able
to
have
lunch
with
a
few
of
these
folks
and
I
was
blown
away
by
the
energy
and
the
passion
and
the
dedication
they
have
to
supporting
others
in
learning
to
use,
github
and
participating
in
the
open
source
community.
F
F
B
Thanks
to
you
both
for
that,
I
find
your
energy
and
commitment
to
supporting
others
so
inspiring,
and
thanks
to
you
and
many
others,
we've
seen
a
whopping
142
percent
growth
in
the
number
of
students
participating
in
the
campus
program
over
the
last
year.
That
has
brought
us
to
over
a
hundred
thousand
students
in
india.
B
B
The
student
ecosystem
is
incredibly
important
to
the
continued
growth
and
pace
of
innovation
in
india
and
the
more
that
we
can
do
to
equip
the
developers,
innovators
and
solution
builders
of
tomorrow,
the
brighter
our
future
will
look
related
to
this.
If
you're,
a
student
and
you're
not
already
familiar
with
the
github
student
developer,
pack
be
sure
to
check
it
out,
it
offers
over
14
million
rupees
worth
of
access
to
free
software
and
services
to
student
developers.
B
This
builds
on
top
of
github's
campus
program
by
offering
participating
students
with
a
unique
opportunity
to
engage
with
companies
in
india
and
get
hands-on
development
experience
outside
of
the
classroom.
The
program
offers
a
three-month
paid
externship
to
work
on
open
source
projects
in
partnership
with
tech
companies.
B
B
This
is
such
an
incredible
community
and
github
is
honored
to
be
a
small
part
of
it.
Over
the
last
year,
it's
been
a
privilege
to
follow
the
journeys
of
so
many
wonderful
developers
and
amazing
projects
and
companies.
Here
in
india,
we
want
to
do
everything
that
we
can
to
support
your
growth.
The
three
programs
that
we're
announcing
today
are
uniquely
available
to
developers
in
india,
the
github
open
source
grant
program
to
provide
financial
support
to
open
source
developers,
so
they
can
continue
their
important
work.
B
The
github
accelerate
program
to
help
support
a
thousand
startups
in
india
in
the
next
year,
with
a
complete
devsecops
platform
for
their
development
teams
and
the
github
india
externship
program
to
provide
relevant
work
experience
to
student
developers
with
programs
like
these
and
the
incredible
creativity,
energy
and
passion
of
all
of
you.
We're
confident
that
we've
only
scratched
the
surface
of
the
growth
potential
in
the
developer
community.
Here
in
india,
in
fact,
by
the
third
anniversary
of
github
india
in
february
2023,
we
believe
more
than
10
million
developers
in
india
will
be
calling
github
home.
B
B
Thank
you
for
joining
me
today,
as
we
kick
off
our
first
github
satellite
in
india.
I'm
looking
forward
to
hearing
from
many
of
you
over
the
next
couple
of
days
and
continuing
to
find
energy
and
inspiration
in
your
contributions
to
open
source
and
global
technology
as
a
whole,
and
I
cannot
wait
until
I
can
come
back
and
meet
with
you
in
person
until
then
enjoy
satellite
and
keep
on.
H
Hello,
everyone
and
welcome
to
github
satellite
india,
2021
wow.
It's
been
an
amazing
keynote
and
that
you
know
we
are
coming
in
live.
This
is
the
first
time
that
we
are
having
satellite
for
india
2021
to
celebrate
our
developer
community
out
here
in
india
to
showcase
local
developers,
projects
companies
and
also
like
how
erika
mentioned
to
celebrate
our
one-year
anniversary.
H
So
I
am
current
on
the
developer
relations
team
at
github
coming
into
you
live
from
bangalore
india.
So
it's
really
amazing
to
be
over
here.
You
might
have
seen
me
across
at
universe
last
time,
while
I
was
hosting
the
developer
track
along
with
one
of
my
colleagues
mishmanders.
H
I
Nisha,
hey
karen,
I
am
so
excited
to
be
here
just
like
what
karen
said.
I
am
calling
in
live
from
washington
state
usa
and
you
can
probably
tell
from
my
accent
originally
from
the
uk
as
well,
and
exactly
what
karen
said:
I'm
also
working
in
deveral
too,
and
working
with
the
lovely
folks
in
the
community,
as
well
as
the
rest
of
the
folks
in
github,
and
I'm
truly
excited
about
being
here
at
github
satellite
india.
I
But
you
know
what
let's
talk
about
that
keynote
right,
so
much
great
stuff
that
erica
shared
I
mean,
first
of
all,
to
know
that
india
is
the
fastest
growing
country
in
open
source,
literally
blows
my
mind,
that
is
amazing,
and
then
the
announcements
of
the
overall
help
and
support
to
you
know
open
source,
maintainers
contributors
startups
and
students.
That's
amazing!
I
thought
the
whole
keynote
was
fantastic,
but
you
know
what
enough
about
what
we
think
we
want
to
hear
what
you
all
think
so
go
on.
Shout
shout
all
about
it
from
your
rooftops.
Right
karen!
H
No,
no,
no
anisha!
You
know
I
we
really
wish.
We
could
do
that
so
that
we
can
hear
you,
but
well
we're
really
far
away.
So
why
don't
you
just
hit
us
up
on
twitter,
so
tweet
out
to
us
using
the
hashtag
killer,
satellite
and
also
tag
us
on
at
github
india,
so
that
we
can
know
what's
happening?
What
are
you
liking?
What
are
your
favorite
sessions,
favorite
moments
and
a
whole
lot
more
as
well?
You
know
so
do
let
us
know,
let's
have
the
conversation
up
and
running
and
going
so.
H
I
Mean
karen,
you
can,
but
let
me
just
tell
you
what
is
going
on
with
satellite
over
the
next
two
days.
So,
as
you
know,
we
have
two
days
worth
of
content
four
hours
a
day
plus
workshops
which
we'll
share
a
little
bit
more
about
with
you
as
well,
and
we've
got
two
channels,
as
you
can
see
on
the
screen
right.
I
There
we've
got
the
of
course
the
open
source
channel
which
you're
watching
us
right
now
and
we'll
be
featuring
the
best
of
open
source
here
and
then
you
can
also
hop
on
over
to
the
devops
channel,
where
you
can
join
our
friends,
divya
and
morehead
as
they
dive
into
everything
about
devops
and
don't
forget,
you
can
alternate
between
two
channels
as
well
and
you
can
do
that
right
in
the
top
now
up
there
as
well,
but
don't
forget
when
you
do
alternate,
the
channel
will
be
muted.
H
No,
no,
oh,
absolutely
not
an
issue,
because
if
you
miss
it
all
of
these
sessions
are
gonna
be
available
on
demand
starting
monday,
the
29th
of
march.
So
you
can
go
back
and
then
check
out
all
of
your
favorite
sessions.
Favorite
moments
from
the
sessions
and
rewatch
and
relive
the
experience
of
satellite
once
again,
all
on
demand
and
also
the
fun
of
satellite
doesn't
really
end.
You
know
at
the
end
of
the
sessions
because
we
have
hands-on
workshops
as
well,
along
with
experts
from
kidder
and
the
community.
H
So
if
you
have
already
signed
up
then
head
over
to
get
up
satellite
dot
com,
slash
workshops
which
is
going
to
start
at
3
p.m.
Today,
as
well
as
tomorrow,
so
you
can
head
over
and
then
check
out
the
workshops
as
well.
If
you've
already
signed
up
so
anisha,
you
know
so,
let's,
let's
discuss
about
how
we
can
discuss
with
the
community
on
what
they
want
to
discuss.
Sorry.
I
B
I
Forward
slash
discussions,
you'll
catch
both
me
and
current.
There
you'll
find
the
github
subject
matter.
Experts
hanging
around
there
as
well
and
they'll
be
engaging
during
the
sessions
as
well
and
don't
forget
we'll
be
taking
your
questions
for
the
speaker.
Q,
a
at
github
at
github,
satellite.com,
forward,
slash
discussions
and
there'll
be
a
q
a
after
each
session
as
well.
So
you
know
what
let's
get
cracking
on
with
the
first
session
of
the
day
karen
who
do
we
have
to
get
the
first
to
get
the
first
session
rolling
today.
H
Well,
at
github
satellite
india
2021
what
can
be
a
much
better
session
other
than
the
story
of
and
the
journey
of
a
project
made
in
india.
So
for
the
first
session
of
the
day
we
have
you
know
the
creator
of
hopscotch
leah
thomas
talk
about
his
and
his
team's
journey
in
creating
hopscotch,
which
is
an
open
source
api
builder.
It's
a
really
interesting
one
and
you
know
leos-
will
be
sharing
a
lot
of
interesting
stuff
about
the
project,
he's
very
passionate
about
the
developer
community,
open
source
and
hackathons
as
well.
I
No,
you
have
to
go
to
don't
forget
to
remember,
to
engage
on
discussions.
That's
where
you
need
to
go
so
don't
forget
to
post
your
questions
there
for
lease
and
he'll
be
able
to
answer
them
after
the
session
as
well
so
elias.
You
know
what,
let's
hop
on
over
straight
over
to
you
helius.
Take
it
away.
I
K
So
also
the
most
important
thing
I
will
be
giving
out
five
super
simple
ways
on
how
you
can
monetize
your
own
open
source
projects
and,
at
the
end,
I
will
be
discussing
the
future
of
open
source
developer
tools.
So
without
further
ado,
let's
get
started
so
this
happened
in
2019
august
21.
I
was
a
fresher,
just
joined
in
a
very
early
step,
startup
just
after
my
engineering,
graduation
and
one
of
the
first
tasks
that
I
was
assigned
is
api
integration
of
a
project.
K
There
were
like
100
plus
api
endpoints
for
me
to
test
and
bind
it
to
the
ui.
So
so
that
was
the
exact
day
that
I
realized
there
is
this
category
of
tools
called
api
testing
tools
and
guess
what
I
actually
went
on
a
hunt
to
find
a
simple
solution
that
would
allow
me
to
test
my
apis.
Without
you
know,
making
much
effort,
I
even
tried
downloading
one
popular
app,
but
it
ended
up
crashing
my
10
year
old,
pc
and
realizing.
All
such
tools
are,
you
know,
causing
a
lot
of
cpu
consumption.
K
I
was
very
frustrated
because,
at
the
end
of
the
day,
if
I
don't
get
my
job
done,
I'm
gonna
get
fired
from
my
first
ever
tech
job.
So
at
that
night
itself
I
decided
to
create
a
tool
which
operates
in
my
web
browser
so
that
I
can,
I
can
you
know,
test
my
aps
directly
from
the
browser
window
itself,
without
switching
back
and
forth
between
multiple
apps
and
within,
like
two
to
three
hours,
I
created
a
very
minimal
mvp
which
looked
something
like
this,
so
you
can
see
exactly
how
unpolished
or
incomplete
the
first
time.
K
Vp
of
hope,
squash
looks
like
this
is
the
first
ever
initial
commit
that
I
made
on
github
for
the
hopes
coach
project.
It
is
pretty
simple:
you
just
have
to
enter
the
api,
endpoint
choose
a
method
and
just
click
send
and
you
will
get
the
response
beneath
it.
So
if
there
is
anything
or
if
there
was
only
one
thing,
I
want
you
to
remember
from
this
session.
It
should
be.
K
This
never
be
ashamed
of
your
initial
question
and
if
your
first
launch
doesn't
look
somewhat
like
this,
the
chances
are,
it's
probably
too
late
to
launch
so
ship,
your
product
ship,
your
idea
as
soon
as
possible.
So
moving
on
after
making
the
initial
commit,
I
felt
very
proud
of
myself.
I
went.
I
was
very
satisfied
with
what
I
have
done.
I
really
wanted
to
share
the
news
with
the
community.
K
K
After
launching
the
mvp
in
github
pages,
I
also
wrote
a
blog
on
my
dev
dot
profile,
and
I
I
went
back
to
sleep
the
next
day
when
I
woke
up.
I
actually
woke
up
to
this
hundred
plus
notifications
on
my
smartphone.
Most
of
them
were
from
github.
There
were
a
lot
of
issues.
There
were
a
lot
of
future
requests
lot
of
comments
on
the
project.
K
K
You
can
test
your
apis
within
two
to
five
seconds
and
response
can
be
like
found
here.
Apart
from
testing
restful
apis,
you
can
even
test
graphql
real-time
api,
such
as
web,
socket
ssc.
You
can
even
generate
api
documentation
and
the
whole
hopes.
Coach
testing
ecosystem
consists
of
a
cli
client,
two
web
browser
extensions,
a
proxy
middleware
servers
and
a
lot
of
lot
of
other
projects
as
well.
K
So
this
is
the
initial
chaining
of
hopscotch
and
right
now
we
are
at
a
good
good
position
where
the
repository
has
more
than
29,
000,
plus
github
stars
with
all
120
plus
contributors
from
around
the
world.
K
K
K
So
these
are
some
of
my
observations
that
I
made
from
building
hopscotch
project,
which
might
help
you
to
build
the
next
best
open
source
project.
So
the
first
thing
starts
with
the
realization
that
progress
takes
time.
It
might
happen
overnight,
but
the
mindset
should
be
progress
should
take
at
least
a
limited
period
of
time.
K
For
the
project
to
get
to
a
mature
state,
it
might
be
one
week,
one
month,
six
months
or
hour
and
year,
so
the
mindset
is
very
important
that
progress
is
a
gradual
process
and
the
second
thing
I
I
really
keen
to
do
is
I
always
try
to
solve
a
single
problem
faced
by
myself,
and
this.
This
very
reason
is
why
I
started
the
project
hopscotch.
K
I
was
facing
an
issue
or
a
problem
which
is
there.
There
was
no
api
testing
tools,
works
for
web
web
platform,
and
I
made
that
solution,
and
at
first
I
was
the
only
user,
but
as
soon
as
I
started,
sharing
it
with
more
my
friends,
I
started
to
realize
the
app
requires
more
essential
features
and
a
lot
of
refactoring
that
need
to
be
done
so
always
start
with
one
problem
and
solve
that
solution
for
one
user
and
scale
upwards,
and
the
other
thing,
which
is
the
most
important
of
all,
is
being
consistent
with
your
project.
K
Never
let
your
dependencies
go
out
of
date,
always
keep
your
repository
up
to
date,
accept
contributions,
reply
to
your
issues
or
pull
requests
as
soon
as
possible.
So
that
is
how
and
why
you
should
keep
your
repositories
consistent
and
next
thing
is
always
keep
your
community
engaged
for
hopscotch.
We
have
two
very
active
communities,
one
is
a
discord
server
and
the
other
is
a
telegram
public
group.
K
We
always
discuss
our
upcoming
futures
with
the
community
members
and
get
feedbacks
on
how
to
do
it
or
if
we
encounter
a
bug
which
is,
you
know,
affecting
a
lot
of
usage.
We
always
ask
for
the
community
members
on
feedbacks.
Also,
you
should
try
to
promote
your
project.
Very
often
this
can
be
done
in
lot
of
ways,
but
from
my
personal
experience,
I
believe
documenting
your
project,
whether
through
a
blog
or
a
github,
read
me
everything
works.
K
I
wrote
a
blog
and
document
your
progress
is
the
single
most
best
way
to
promote
your
project.
Share
your
obstacles
share
how
you
solve
them.
There
are
developers
who
are
eagerly
waiting
to
see
how
you
did
that,
and
the
next
thing
is
well.
The
project
consists
of
me
and
one
of
my
partner,
andrew
bastian,
who
lives
in
canada.
We
are
the
core
developers
and
we
always
ask
others
for
help.
K
I
am
a
friend
and
person,
and
my
partner
is
like
back
back
in
person.
Everything
related
to
backhand
is
single-handedly
done
by
him
and
with
the
help
of
the
community,
I
and
him
always
ask
for
feedbacks
and
help
from
the
community,
and
we
are
always
keen
to
do
it.
So
this
always
help
us
to
keep
the
community
engaged
and
this
this
results
in
the
betterment
of
the
project.
K
You
know:
building
a
recurring
revenue
for
your
operations
project,
so
the
first
one
which
is
the
most
obvious
one,
accepting
sponsorships
and
donations
from
your
potential
users.
Every
open
source
project
has
this
philosophy
of
gratitude
behind
it.
The
users
are
agreed
to
show
the
gratitude
in
terms
of
financial
support
as
well,
and
to
do
it
there
are
a
lot
of
projects.
Github
sponsors,
open,
collective,
are
doing
extraordinary
things
to
do
so.
I
I
advise
everyone
to
add
a
sponsorship
button
to
your
repositories
and
even
organizations.
K
The
second
most
one
is
self-hosted
instances.
So
after
evaluating
our
traffic,
we
realized
that
our
48
percentage
of
traffic
were
coming
from
developer
communities
in
countries
like
china,
singapore
even
from
india
and
one
thing
very
peculiar
about
these
communities.
Are
they
they
prefer
a
self-hosted
instance
rather
than
a
public
domain,
and
obviously
there
are
a
lot
of
reasons
for
this,
like
bandwidth
issues
and
all,
but
you
can
actually
find
a
monetization
plan
on
self-hosting.
You
are
on
open
source
project.
K
If
it
is
self-hostable
project
do
provide
guidelines
on
how
to
do
it,
and
if
someone
is
having
trouble
with
self-hosting,
your
project
help
them
and
accept
a
fee
for
that.
So
that
is
about
how
self-hosting
your
projects-
and
the
next
thing
is
being
a
creator
of
your
project.
You
are
the
best
one
to
educate,
how
to
run
your
project
or
how
to
make
use
of
a
project
for
others
for
a
project
like
hopscotch.
K
There
is
literally
zero
friction
to
get
started
with,
but
as
the
use
cases
increase
or
if,
if
the
uses
requires
a
complex
functionality
or
a
feature,
they
approach
us
on
how
to
do
it.
We
either
show
them
how
to
solve
it
or
we
solve
them
by
ourselves,
and
for
that
for
educating
your
users
on
how
to
use
your
software
is,
you
can
accept
a
charge
and
the
fourth
most
one
is
again
one
of
the
most
conventional
one.
You
can
release
a
feature
or
a
set
of
features
which
comes
with
a
paid
plan.
K
This
works
very
similar
to
software,
to
service
models,
or
if
your
expenses
server
bills
are
more
than
enough,
you,
you
should.
You
know,
hope
for
this.
K
There
are
a
lot
of
angel
investors
who
are
looking
to
fund
open
source
project,
so
keep
a
pitch
check
with
your
project
and
ask
for
investors
on
potential
plans
or
collaborations
moving
on.
K
So,
even
though,
if
you
are
able
to
sustain
your
project,
how
can
you
even
make
an
open
source
developer
tools?
If
you
look
at
the
current
proprietary
services,
if
you
look
at
every
of
them,
you
can
actually
find
that
every
property
service
use
at
least
one
open
source
tool
or
library
in
its
core
technology.
K
K
You
know
in
an
another
flow,
if
you,
if
you
find
anything
which
lacks
a,
is,
find
a
solution
and
make
an
mvp,
even
though
you
built
a
solution
for
a
single
user,
always
look
for
an
enterprise
level
use
cases.
So
basically
enterprises
are
communities
of
single
users.
If
one
user
has
an
issue
the
chances
are,
there
are
a
lot
of
users
which
face
the
same
issues.
K
K
So
scaling
again
comes
with
you
know,
starting
with
one
user
sharing
with
10
of
your
friends
and
scaling
scaling
to
your
100
plus
friends,
documenting
your
progress
and
all
so.
This
is
how
you
can
exactly
build
and
make
the
next
best
open
source
developer
tools
with
the
help
of
community
and
hopes
coach
being
a
tool
built
by
the
community
and
built
for
the
community.
K
J
H
Thanks
a
lot
lias
that
was,
that
was
a
really
interesting
session
to
know
about.
You
know
your
journey
in
building
hopscotch
and
everything
else
that
you
have
come
across.
So
all
of
you
tuning
in
live.
If
you
have
any
questions
for
vrs
drop
them
over
on
discussions
on
github
satellite
dot,
com,
slash
discussions
and
we'll
be
taking
up,
some
of
them
live
here
for
liars.
H
H
K
So
this
is
actually
a
tricky
question,
because
everybody
has
their
own
ways
on
finding
motivation
and
how
I
personally
did
is
I
always
find
that
motivation
is
a
personal
choice.
If
I
want
to
do
it,
I
will
find
a
way
to
do
it
and,
if
I
don't
want,
I
will
find
excuses
too.
I
want
that.
So
I
believe
motivation
is
a
choice
that
you
have
to
make
by
yourself,
and
the
way
to
do
is
is
like
the
example
that
I
mentioned.
K
If
you
are,
you
know,
if
you're
like
documenting
your
progress
or
sharing
the
news
with
your
friends
or
your
communities,
you
will
always
have
this
push
from
them
to
deliver
much
more,
and
that
is
the
single.
Most
reason
why
I
keep
you
know.
Building
all
those
projects
and
motivation
is
a
choice
that
you
have
to
make
by
yourself.
I
K
Yes,
so,
as
I
mentioned,
the
project
has
over
120
plus
contributors
from
almost
every
country,
though
so
how
we
did
it
well,
we
kind
of
like
leveraged
that
you
know
issues
with
opposite
time
zones
to
our
advantage
and
how
we
did
it
at
any.
Given
time
either.
One
of
us,
one
of
the
contributors
will
be
online
and
now,
whenever
someone
raises
a
concern
or
an
issue
or
a
pull
request,
we
will
immediately
respond
to
it,
because,
if
I
am
sleeping
my
friend
will
be.
K
You
know
online
at
any
given
time
and
we
actually
leveraged
that
issue
to
our
advantage
and
that
that
alone
kept
our
community
very
engaging
yeah.
H
Great,
so
one
other
one,
other
kind
of
like
you
know,
slightly
different
question
that's
come
in
is
how
do
you
really
see
open
source,
making
an
impact
making
the
world
a
better
place.
K
Okay,
so
being
an
open
source
developer.
Well,
apart
from
contributing
to
your
open
source
projects,
there
are
a
lot
of
ways
on
you
know
how
how
you
can
make
a
change
in
the
world,
and
it
doesn't
have
to
be
like
writing
code.
It
can
be
helping
your
friends
in
need.
It
can
be,
you
know,
being
a
part
in
the
decision
committee
or
it.
K
It
can
be
like
very
single
gestures
like
responding
to
your
concerns
raised
by
your
users
and
all
so
all
those
little
small
things
that
we
do
are
exactly
what
makes
the
a
better
place.
I
Great
we've.
I
Got
a
question
coming
from
adash
who's
watching
watching
your
session
live
right
now,
which
is
great,
so
adash
asks.
What
does
it
mean
to
self-host
projects.
K
K
And
if
you
have
a
potential
customer
who
would
like
to
have
a
self-hosted
version,
you
can
have
a
discussion
with
them
and
you
know
charge
a
fixed
amount
for
doing
all
those
self-hosting
process,
which
is
again
one
of
the
best
ways
on
how
you
can
monetize
your
open
source
project.
If
it
is
self-hostable.
J
I
I've
got
another
question
for
you,
then.
Oh
sorry,
guy.
I
No
yeah,
I
was,
I
was
gonna
say:
do
you
have
any
like
one
or
two
tips
that
you
can
share
with
our
viewers
on
how
they
can
quickly
get
started.
K
K
It
can
be
any
of
your
choice:
javascript
even
html
css,
any
language
which
you
are
comfortable
with
and
use
github
search
box
to
find
projects
that
need
help,
always
search
for
topics
like
good
time
issues
and
or
for
you
know,
finding
issues
or
potential
collaborations
for
newbies,
or
you
know
anybody
can
do
use
that
and
have
a
communication
with
the
collaborators
or
core
members
on
how
to
get
started
with
a
particular
project.
K
Every
open
source
project
has
this
team
of
car
maintenance,
who
are
very
keen
to
help
those
who
would
like
to
contribute
to
their
project
at
hopscotch.
We
personally
encourage
everyone
to
make
a
contribution,
because
that
is
all
you
know.
That
is
everything
about
the
community.
H
Great
thanks
a
lot
lias
we
know
there
are.
There
are
some
more
questions
which
are
coming
in,
but
just
as
a
reminder,
lias
will
be
around
on
github
discussions
for
the
next
30
minutes,
so
you
can
catch
him
over
on
getupsatelite.com
discussions
right
over
there
for
any
other
questions
that
you
can
have.
So
thanks
a
lot
lias
for
joining
us
today.
It
was
really
interesting
to
learn
about
your
journey
about
hopscotch
and
everything
else
as
well,
so
see
you
soon.
Thank
you.
I
H
Yeah
that
was
really
interesting
to
know
you
know
about
about
their
journey
and
all
of
the
things
that
liars
and
team
have
been
doing
and
and
the
project
has
got
a
lot
of
traction
as
well
with,
I
believe,
more
than
27
000
stars
on
github,
with
many
contributions
and
contributors
across
the
world
as
well.
So
that's
that's
really,
nice.
So
what
else
do
we
have
going
on
anisha.
I
So
happening
right
now
on
the
devops
channel,
you
can
join
in
with
a
session
from
right
to
left
security
and
secure
development,
but
we
do
have
another
session.
That's
going
to
be
coming
up
here
soon
as
well,
but
before
we
get
into
that,
how
are
we
doing
so
far?
Let
us
know
on
twitter
as
well.
You
can
go
to
at
github.
I
Sorry
if
you
go
to
twitter
and
then
mention
github,
satellite
or
you
can
tweet
us
at
github
india
and
tell
us
what
you're
most
excited
about
about
seeing
today
and
don't
forget
to
use
the
github
satellite
that
I
just
mentioned
as
well.
I
So
there's
loads
of
things
coming
on
and
you've
got
the
two
channels
as
well
that
you
can
flip
flop
between
we've
got
obviously
the
open
source
channel,
as
well
as
the
devops
channel,
where
we've
got
our
friends
and
morehead
and
divya
hosting
there
as
well
and
don't
forget,
if
you
do
miss
out
on
any
of
the
sessions
that
have
already
happened,
you
can
get
them
on
demand
at
githubsatellite.com
and
they'll
be
available
on
monday
march.
The
29th
as
well-
and
you
know,
there's
plenty
more
things.
I
Coming
up,
don't
forget
to
check
out
the
schedule
as
well
there's
loads
of
stuff
on
there
as
well,
and
if
you
haven't
already
seen
the
octa-cat
generator,
go
and
check
it
out
right
now.
You
can
create
your
own
octa
cat
and
then
share
it
with
us
as
well
on
twitter,
because
we
want
to
see
all
their
lovely
creations
that
you
create
as
well,
and
you
know
whatever
mood
you're
in
whatever
octocad
you
create,
go
ahead
and
share
it
on
twitter,
using
the
github,
github
satellite
as
well.
I
L
Hello,
everyone
and
welcome
to
this
panel
discussion,
where
we
are
going
to
discuss
about
how
to
make
about
maintaining
large
open
source
projects
and
to
discuss
about
it.
We
have
two
specialists
with
me:
siddharth
and
shikha,
hey
siddharth
and
shikhar.
Thanks
for
joining
and
very
good
morning,
hey
thank.
L
Open
source
projects
you,
which
you
might
have
heard
about-
or
you
might
have
used
it
as
well,
so
they
are
rep-
they
maintain
gatsby
and
magento
as
full-time
maintainers.
So
it
will
be
interesting
to
learn
about
how
they
started
their
journey
and
then
the
tips
which
they
have
to
share
to
new
maintainers
or
the
developers
who
wants
to
get
started
with
open
source
projects
and
want
to
become
a
maintainer.
So
let's
go
ahead
and
get
started
so
first
siddharth
and
we
would
love
to
hear
about
your
journey.
M
And
I
have
done
my
schooling
from
kushinagar
only
and
for
my
graduation
in
b
tech.
I
have
done
it
from
srmce,
I'm
lucknow
and
after
doing
my
graduation,
I
joined
a
company
which
is
said,
cost
technologies
at
its
very
early
stage
and
there
I
was
working
for
magento
projects
and
magento
based
clients
for
fixing
their
bugs
and
creating
several
extensions.
M
M
It's
very
interesting
part
for
me
and
like
after
doing
continuous
contributions,
it
increases
my
interest
in
open
source
technologies
and
then
I
like
applied
to
become
a
maintainer
over
the
magento
github
and
since
then,
I'm
extensively
working
for
actively
working
for
a
magento
maintainer
as
well
as
for
contribution
activities,
and
during
this
period
only
I
started
a
project
in
my
organization,
but
that
was
the
pwa
studio
projects
for
this.
That
was
based
on
magento
pwa
studio
project.
M
Only
but
for
this
I
learned
a
lot
of
new
things
related
to
front-end
technologies
like
react
and
also
the
apis
related
work
like
graphql
and
yeah.
During
this
period,
only
I
got
an
opportunity
from
magento
product
development
team
to
work
with
them
for
their
products,
like
related
to
upgrade
magento,
upgrade
related
projects
and
also
like
creating
extension
for
graphql
apis
in
magento
product
only
so
yeah.
M
I
worked
over
that
and
after
completion
of
the
project,
I
resumed
my
work
over
pwa
studio
in
my
current
organization
and
I'm
currently
working
on
that
and
recently
I
have
featured
in
github,
read
me
project
and
yeah.
That's
all
about
me
for
my
career
journey.
L
N
Sure
sure
so
so
hi
I'm
sid,
I
live
in
mumbai
in
india.
I
started
out
my
journey
in
open
source
with
gatsby.
In
fact,
I
had
only
made
small
contributions
to
projects
I'd
used
before
gatsby
somewhere
around.
I
think
december
of
2018
was
it
is
when
I
started
working
on
gatsby
as
a
contractor.
N
Gaster
was
looking
for
someone
to
help
them
do
first
touch
on
github
and
I
met
jason
langstor
via
a
friend
and
you
know
started
working
with
them
a
couple
of
months
later.
You
know
we
both
liked
working
with
each
other.
I
decided
to
join
full
time
and
yeah
it's
been.
It's
been
a
pretty
solid
journey.
I've
been
helping,
maintain
gatsby
open
source
over
the
past
two
years.
N
More
recently,
I've
been
working
on
gatsby
cloud,
which
is
our
cloud
platform
to
build
your
gatsby
apps,
and
you
can
also
host
them
now
so
yeah,
my
entire
open
source
journey
has
been
with
gatsby
and
that's
how
I
got
started.
L
It's
it's
I'm
sure
it's
fun
to
actually
work
with
a
company
which
is
like
open
source
and
you
are
doing
open
source
for
the
full
time.
So
that's
great
good
to
be
here
yeah.
So
before
we
move
ahead
like
so,
there
is
a
fun
fact
which
I
wanted
to
share
with
you.
I'm
actually
related
to
both
the
cities
which
she
can't
see
this
from.
So
I'm
from
mumbai.
L
I
actually
lived
in
mumbai,
my
entire
life
almost
for
29
years-
and
I
am
my
family-
is
from
north
up
so
yeah,
so
it's
great
to
connect
with
both
of
you.
L
So,
let's
move
on
to
the
next
question
which
we
have
so
I'm
sure
you
you
have
been
working
from
working
with
in
the
open
source
for
a
long
time
now
you
have
been
maintaining
a
large
open
source
projects
as
well,
so
how
it
has
actually
impacted
your
career,
so
it
doesn't
help
being
a
maintainer
of
project
or
contributing
to
open
source
projects.
M
Yeah
definitely
like
for
me,
like
working
over
open
source
is
more
like
knowledge
sharing
and
since
I
was
working
with
the
open
source
projects
with
my
clients,
so
it
helped
me
to
find
out
all
the
things
related
to
that
particular
projects
which
is
being
worked
being
done
on
and
also
I'm
able
to
contribute
and
like
fix
issues,
also
involved
in
the
github
discussions
and
based
on
that.
Like
I
I'm
very
soon,
I
started
getting
recognition
out
of
my
work
so
yeah.
M
So
people
recognize
me
for
me
for
my
work
and
also
I'm
able
to
get
to
know
about
the
things
which
is
related
to
the
work
like.
I
know
the
places
where
I
need
to
find
out
and
I
can
easily
get
the
answer
of
several
questions
from
the
clients,
and
apart
from
this
also,
I
got
feedback
for
my
work
from
highly
experienced
developers.
So
it's
really
in
improved
me
for
enhancing
my
skills
and
knowledge
so
yeah.
It's
definitely
like
helping
me
very
much
grow
in
my
career.
N
It's
been
great,
I
think,
there's
been
two
parts
to
it.
One
is
the
fact
that
working
on
now
gatsby
is
a
is
a
pretty
huge
project
right.
We
have,
I,
I
don't
remember
the
numbers
of
the
top
my
head,
but
I
think
roughly
about
400
000
downloads
weekly.
Now
that's
a
lot
of
scale
and
that's
a
lot
of
users
and
on
such
a
large
project.
There's
always
a
lot
of
nuance
and
complexity
right
and
there's
and
there's
issues
you
kind
of
see
that
that
you
wouldn't
normally
hit
on
a
day-to-day
basis.
N
That's
been
something
that's
helped
me
level
up
tremendously
as
as
a
dev
and
besides
that
working
in
the
open
working
in
public
in
open
source
is
great,
because
it's
really
helped
me
sort
of
build
a
presence
and
also
build
you
know
stuff
to
be
able
to
show
off
on
github.
So
I
think
I
think
that's
been
pretty
solid
for
my
career.
L
Oh,
that's
that's
great.
I
really
agree
with
that
because
I
have
been
doing
open
source
from
last
one
and
a
half
year,
no
no
more
than
two
years,
and
I
can
see
the
kind
of
impact
it
has
on
my
career.
So
I
agree
with
both
of
you
now.
Next,
let's
move
on
to
the
next
question.
I'm
sure
there
are
a
lot
of
new
developers
and
we
have
just
seen
the
stats
and
I'm
really
excited.
L
I
mean
india
is
one
of
the
growing
countries
in
terms
of
open
source
contribution
million
developers
added
in
last
one
year
and
I'm
hoping
for
next
10
million
soon.
So
how
or
what
are
your
suggestions
to
the
nift
developers
who
wants
to
start
contributing
to
open
source
so
shikha
want
to
take
the
sage
first.
M
Yeah
like
for
new
developers
like,
I
would
suggest
them
to
like
just
go
for
any
open
source
like
if
they
want
to
like,
have
a
graph
like
they
are
just
graduating
and
they
want
to
join
any
product
development
companies
or
something
like
somewhere.
I
have
read
about
that
like.
If
you
have
some
background
in
open
source
working,
then
there
are
more
chances
to
get
in
in
a
big
product
development
companies.
M
I
have
read
it
somewhere,
so
basically,
for
that
is
also
very
helpful
to
increase
their
improve
their
skills
and
also
the
code.
You
write
on
open
source
github
like
repositories,
then
that
will
be
exposed
to
everyone.
So
you
more
focus
on
your
work,
so
it
definitely,
it
is
going
to
improve
your
skills
so
for
like.
Basically,
they
should
just.
They
should
not
rush
about
doing
the
contribution.
They
should
just
go
slightly
and
they
just.
M
I
would
suggest
them
to
read
out
all
the
comments
on
the
previous
pull
requests
and
issues
like
just
involving
the
discussions
first
and
then
they
will
learn
the
patterns
over
working
on
that
and
also
like
just
not
go
for
the
code.
Contribution
also
go
for
the
documentations.
M
That
is
also
very
helpful
part
for
any
devs,
and
they
will
also
like
realize
it
very
soon
whenever
they
will
expose
to
real
industries.
So
yeah,
I
would
suggest
them
to
be
like
go
slowly,
don't
flush
and
be
consistent
with
whatever
they
are
doing.
Yes,.
J
L
Correct
tips,
what
about
you
said,
I'm
I'm!
I
have
seen
gatsby
actually
gets
get
a
very
close
with
the
developers
or
the
developer
community,
which
is
out
there
and
they
have
helped.
I
think
many
developers
to
start
contributing
to
open
source.
So
I
would,
I
would
love
to
hear
from
you
how
you
do
that,
how
you
how
I
mean?
What
are
the
tips
you
share
with
the
new
developers.
J
N
That's
a
great
question,
so
here's
what
I
here's,
what
I
think
the
the
best
way
to
start
contributing
is
to
contribute
to
a
project
that
you
use
frequently,
if
you're
using
any
project
in
either
your
day-to-day
work
or
on
a
site
project,
and
you
you
know
you
happen
to
hit
a
bug.
Maybe
that's
a
great
place
to
start.
You
know,
try
to
create
a
small
reproduction
open,
an
issue
see
if
you
can
fix
the
bug
yourself
open
a
pull
request,
or
even
if
it
isn't
a
bug.
N
Often
we
we,
you
know,
we
read
documentation.
Something
is
unclear,
you're,
not
sure
exactly
what
you
know.
A
certain
api
looks
like
maybe
a
great
place
to
start
is
to
improve
that
documentation,
and
you
know
talking
about
gatsby
with
gatsby.
Our
contributions
have
been
fantastic,
I
mean
gatsby
is
what
it
is
in
a
huge
part
because
of
the
community
we've
had
over
2000.
N
If
I
recall
correctly
contributors
over
time
and
if
you'd
like
to
get
started
with
gatsby
itself,
we
have
a
ton
of
open
issues,
I'm
always
happy
to
help
and
point
you
in
the
right
direction.
You
can
reach
out
to
me
on
twitter.
We
also
have
a
gatsby
discord,
which
is
a
great
place
for
people
to
you
know
just
get
their
feet
wet
and
get
started
you
can.
You
can
find
a
link
on
on
our
website
yeah,
you
know,
and
no
no
contribution
is
too
small.
N
L
I
agree
totally
agreed
because
I
started
my
contribution
in
angular
with
documentation
and
it
never
mattered
how
small
that
pr
is,
but
actually
open,
source
community
welcomes
or
appreciates
each
and
every
pr.
So
in
case
you
want
to
get
started
with
open
source
contribution,
just
go
ahead
and
get
in
touch
with
siddharth
and
they
will
get.
They
will
help
you
now.
Let's
move
on
to
the
next
question,
which
is
more
on
the
terms
of
maintainers,
because
there
are
really
there
if
you
go
to
open
source.
L
There
are
a
lot
of
consumers
rather
than
the
people
who
are
actually
helping
the
open
source
community
and
maintainers
are
actually
one
of
the
important
part
of
that
entire
ecosystem.
I
would
say
so
what
are
your
suggestions
to
new
maintainers
of
an
open
source
projects?
I
mean
when
they
represent
a
community.
N
Sure
sure
I
think
firstly,
that's
a
great
question.
Thank
you
for
asking
that
I
think
you
know
my
only
advice
would
be
be
kind,
be
inclusive
and
have
empathy.
I
think
a
lot
of
users
when
they
stumble
upon
your
project
might
not
have
as
much
context
as
you
do,
and
you
know
something
might
seem
unclear.
N
Often
issues
aren't
as
detailed
as
you'd
like
them
to
be,
but
it's
always
it's
always
a
good
idea,
in
my
opinion,
to
be
inclusive,
ask
the
right
questions
and
you
know
try
to
foster
that
that
sort
of
community.
N
Besides
that,
I
think
a
couple
of
things
on
github
right,
I
think
issue
templates
are
a
great
way
to
help
point
people
in
the
right
direction.
Having
you
know,
maybe
a
discord
channel
to
be
able
to
talk
to
folks
who
are
trying
to
contribute
is
something
that
has
been
very
helpful
for
gatsby,
and
I
can
see
a
lot
of
maintainers
you
know
being
able
to
take
sort
of
being
able
to.
N
You
know
benefit
from
that,
and
finally,
I
think
labeling
is
is
a
is
a
really
helpful
thing
to
do.
Right.
Github
has
a
couple
of
labels
like
good,
first
issue
that
show
up,
even
if
you
know
you
search
for
a
project
or
or
if
you
search
for
good
first
issues.
So
if
you,
if
you
identify
issues
in
your
project
that
you
think
are
you
know
a
good
starting
point
for
new
contributors
as
a
maintainer
labeling
them,
you
know
editing
their
descriptions
for
those
to
be
really
clear.
N
These
are
things
that
really
help
you
scale.
You
know
your
project
as
a
maintainer
and
help
you
invite
the
right
kind
of
contributions.
So
that's
what
I
would
recommend
be
inclusive
and
you
know
edit.
Your
issues
write
them
well
label
them.
M
Yeah,
I
completely
agree
with
said,
like
whatever
he
was
suggesting
like
to
have
issue
templates
and
labeling,
and
also
editing
the
issue
description
basically
for
magento
itself,
like
we
also
like
there
are
little
templates
for
issues
and
also
like
you
can
also
add
the
good
first
issues
based
on
if
they
are
contributing
for
the
first
time.
M
I
would
also
like
to
add
some
things
like
if
you
are
a
maintainer
and
you
are
reviewing
so
like
that's
the
thing
like
there
are
some
little
mistakes
like
there
is
just
changes
in
one
line
and
one
file,
and
you
just
approve
it
witho
without
checking
all
the
automation
test
is
passed
so
like
sometimes
it
happens
like
the
the
test
is
not
actually
passed,
so
be
make
sure
that
you
are
checking
all
the
things
before
approving
the
pull
request.
M
Also,
I
would
suggest
that,
like
some
time,
I've
seen
that,
like
some
people,
some
maintainers
or
whatever
like
in
some
cases
like
we
are
adding
some
comments
for
the
contributor
and
we
are
not
available
there
to
answer
their
questions
over
that
is
coming
out
of
our
comments,
so
be
make
sure
that
you
are
available
on
time
to
have
like
answer
the
contributors
questions
as
well
and
being
a
maintainer.
I
would
like
it's
not
it's
like.
M
L
Of
view,
so
the
next
question
is
really
important
to
everyone
who
is
involved
in
open
source
or
even
not
involved
in
open
source
right,
so
how
to
stay
away
from
burnout.
So
I'm
sure
it
happens
to
everyone
and
you
may
have
been
in
the
same
scenario.
So
if
you
can
share
your
stories
and
how
you
you
were
able
to
actually
stay
away
from
burnout,
how
you
disconnected
yourself
so
I'll
be
happy
to
actually
hear
your
experiences.
So
that's
it!
You
want
to
go
first.
N
Yeah
sure
so
that's
a
great
question
I
mean
burnout
is,
is
inevitable,
I
think,
to
to
a
certain
extent,
and
it
happens
to
everybody.
It's
happened
to
me.
I'm
sure
it's
happened
to
you
all
as
well.
I
think,
what's
really
important
is
is
work-life
balance
right.
I
think
we
take
for
granted
that,
especially
with
the
pandemic,
it's
easy
to
get
lost
in
your
work
and
spend
too
much
time
working
and
not
you
know,
taking
time
out
to
do
things
that
you
really
enjoy.
N
Even
if
you
really
enjoy
coding-
and
you
know
you
want
to
do
that
outside
of
work-
I
still
recommend
trying
to
take
time
away
from
you
know.
Screens
go
out,
you
know,
get
some
fresh
air
and,
and
you
know,
find
hobbies
that
don't
have
to
do
with
a
computer.
I
think
that
sort
of
balance
really
helps.
One
of
you
know.
The
things
I
do
is
is
I
I
like
diving,
so
I
I
you
know
travel
whenever
I
can,
in
fact,
I'm
I'm
doing
that
right
now.
N
So
yeah,
you
know
try
to
find
some
solid
work.
Life
balance
maintain
boundaries,
take
time
off
regularly
for
yourself
to
recuperate
and
don't
work,
weekends.
That's
something
that
I
see
a
lot
of
people
doing
early
in
their
career
and
I
would
not
recommend
it.
Don't
work,
weekends.
L
M
Yeah,
I
completely
agree
with
said
because,
like
there
is
like
and
during
this
lockdown
period,
especially
there
are
a
lot
of
chances
to
have
stress
over
the
work
and
like
what
I
do
like.
I
do
to
prioritize
my
work
first,
so
that,
like
I,
am
not
working
on
on
less
important
task
very
much.
M
So
the
prioritization
is
helping
me
out
very
much,
and
apart
from
this,
like
that's
the
said,
said
like
taking
periodically
time
off
from
your
screen
time
and
just
go
involved
in
some
other
activities.
M
That
is
also
helping
us
like
helping
everyone,
a
lot
to
avoid
this
stress,
and
apart
from
this
like,
if,
if
you
are
working
on
certain
tasks-
and
you
have
to
achieve
some
milestone
in
your
work,
so
if
it
is
required
to
do
extra
efforts
and
take
extra
stress
and
be
focused
on
that,
so
in
that
case
like
I
would
suggest
to
find
out
the
motivation
out
of
your
work
time
to
get
note
down
all
the
benefits
and
learnings
you
are
getting
through
that
work.
M
So,
in
that
case
like
if
you
are
working
hard
and
working
too
much
and
with
very
stress
so
in
that
in
that
situation
also,
you
find
the
motivation
to
work,
and
I
really
feel
that
if
you
are
really
motivated
and
passionate
about
your
work,
there
are
less
chances
that
you
will
get
stressed
out
out
of
your
work.
So
that's
the
thing.
That's
the
thing
to
avoid
your
stress
at
your
professional
life.
L
Well,
that's
great,
so
thanks
for
sharing
the
tips
so
now
next
question
which
I
have
is
everyone
has
their
own
motivation
right
so
whenever
they
do
something,
so
what
your
motivation,
what
drives
you
towards
the
open
source
country
or
doing
open
source
contribution
or
maintaining
the
community.
M
The
motivation
is
to
just
come
for
me.
The
motivation
is
to
gather
the
knowledge
and
share
your
knowledge,
like
it's
a
great
feeling,
if
you
are
able
to
help
others
community
and
be
involved
in
that,
and
you
can
be
recognized
for
your
work.
So
the
main
motivation
for
me
is
to
like
you
can
have
the
expert
on
opinion
on
your
working
and
also
you
can
improve
your
skills.
You
can
be
involved
in
several
discussion
and
there
your
your,
like
suggestion,
might
be
matter
almost.
M
Maybe
there
are
some
chances,
like
your
suggestion,
will
be
counted
as
one
of
the
best
suggestion
and
that
can
be
implemented
in
a
way
and
if,
even
if
you
are
working
in
a
big
organization,
they
are
also
including
your
thoughts
in
their
product.
So
it's
a
great
feeling
of
achievement
for
me
like
if
you
are
being
recognized
for
your
work,
so
knowledge
sharing
is
the
most
motivation
for
me
for
working
on
open
source
like
I
can
be
involved
in
the
discussions
and
also
I
can
learn
a
lot
from
their
experiences.
N
My
motivation
is
that
I
get
paid
for
it
I'm
kidding,
but
I
think
I
think
I'm
half
kidding
the
other
thing
that
I
mean
the
thing
I
like
the
most
about
open
source
on
serious
note
is
that
there's
the
sort
of
scale
in
open
source
projects
that's
hard
to
find
in
day-to-day
product
development.
I
mean,
unless
you're
working
on
a
really
large
project
or
a
really
large
product,
like
maybe
twitter
or
facebook.
It's
likely
that
your
open
source
project
will
probably
see
more
users
than
you
know.
N
The
product
you're
using
it
for
maybe
and
that
kind
of
scale
brings
a
really
different
class
of
problems
and
a
really
different
class
of
complexity.
I've
really
been
enjoying
that
at
gatsby
it's
hard,
but
it's
also
it's
hard
to
solve.
You
know
difficult
problems.
I've
I've
noticed
that
that's
driven
me.
Another
thing,
that's
driven
me
has
just
been
you
know.
N
Open
sources
is
really
is
really
satisfying
in
the
fact
that
you
know
when
you
see
other
people
being
able
to
create
real
value
from
from
your
work,
I
think
it's
it's
a
huge
multiplier
in
terms
of
how
much
of
an
impact
you
can
have
right
versus
you
know,
building
one
product
or
building
something
that's
used
in.
You
know
many
products.
That's
that's
really.
You
know
been
driving
me
at
gatsby,
seeing
all
the
fantastic
projects
people
create
with
it.
So
so
yeah,
that's.
What's
that's?
What's
driven
me
so
far,.
L
So,
let's
move
on
to
our
last
question
for
the
day,
so
you
both
have
been
maintaining
gatsby
and
magento
so
where,
where
developers
can
learn
more
about
it,
so
so
do
you
want
to
go
first.
N
Sure
you
can
learn
more
about
gatsby
at
catspjs.com.
You
can
also
learn
more
about
gatsby
on
twitter.
If
you
have
questions
you
can
tweet
to
us,
gatsby
or
you
know
just
follow
us
tweet
at
me.
I'm
happy
to
answer
any
questions.
You
have
or
meet
us
on
the
discord
or
on
github
we're
everywhere.
L
L
M
Main
repository
of
magento
is
like
github.com,
slash,
pregender
and
magento2,
in
that
you
can
also
find
multiple
projects
in
the
same
repositories
like
stuff
related
to
php,
8
migration,
and
also
some
graphql
graph
fuel
pull
request,
and
apart
from
this,
magento,
also
having
some
kind
of
open
source
repositories
for
pwa
studios,
which
is
based
on
the
react
and
node,
and
also
there.
There
is
a
dev
dock
repository
for
magento
bw
studio,
magento,
pwa
studio,
also
the
magento
main
repository.
M
So
there
you
can
find
all
the
information
related
to
magento
stuffs
like
how
you
can
start
working.
How
you
can
create
your
issues,
you
can
create
your
pull
request
and
how
you
can
install
even
the
magento,
all
the
features
related
to
it
so
yeah,
the
magento
github.com,
is
the
main
repository
where
you
can
find
all
this
stuff.
L
That's
great
so
thanks
a
lot,
sir
siddharth
and
shikha
for
joining
us,
and
it
was
I'm
sure
this
is.
This.
Conversation
is
going
to
help
a
lot
of
developers
out
there
and
in
case
you
have
any
questions,
feel
free
to
reach
out
to
anyone.
Student
is
available
on
twitter
and
you
you
can
just
find
that
with
a
handle
in
the
github
satellite
page
and
feel
free
to
connect
with
them,
and
you
can
also
discuss
about
it-
will
get
up
on
bit
of
discussions
so
yeah.
L
That's
it
for
the
day
and
see
you
all.
Thank
you.
I
Wow,
what
a
great
first
panel
discussion
on
maintaining
global
open
source
projects
with
santosh,
as
you
all
know,
who
is
a
getup
star
shika,
who
is
a
maintainer
on
magento
and
siddhart?
Who
is
a
maintainer
on
gatsby
js?
I
know
that
I
learned
so
much,
but
we
learned
so
much
about
how
to
become
maintainers
and
how
to
really
collaborate
with
everyone
globally
as
well.
Hopefully,
everyone
feels
inspired
to
become
a
maintainer
now.
I
know
that
I
certainly
do
so
as
as
santosh
said
earlier
as
well
head
on
over
to
get
up
discussions.
I
The
panelists,
both
santosh,
shika
and
siddharth,
will
be
in
discussions
for
the
next
30
minutes.
And
if
you
don't
know
where
discussions
is,
I
can
tell
you
that
right
now
go
to
github
satellite
dot
com
forward,
slash
discussions
and
you
can
post
your
questions
there
too,
and
you
know
what
let
us
know
what
you
thought
about
the
panel
as
well.
I
You
know
and
let's
go
ahead
and
you
know
I
would
love
if
you
could
share
a
favorite
quote
from
today's
show
and
everything
that
you've
seen
so
far
on
twitter,
using
the
hashtag
github
satellite.
I
So
give
us
a
shout
share
everything
that
you've
got
and
let
us
know
what
you
think
and
if
you're
wondering
what's
happening
on
the
devops
channel
right
now,
right
now
and
well
coming
up
soon
in
the
next
couple
of
minutes,
you'll
see
how
linkage
transforms
code
into
running
software
and
so
go
ahead
and
check
that
out.
But
if
you
want
to
stick
with
us
for
the
next
couple
of
hours,
we've
got
a
ton
of
good
content
coming
your
way
too
as
well.
So
karen
welcome
back.
H
H
Internationalizationize,
your
rap
or
what
we
call
in
short
iii-
nice.
You
know
your
rap,
so
it's
a
really
nice
interesting
discussion
and
a
session
that
amrit
has
around.
You
know
how
you
can
identize
your
app
and
again
like
how
anisha
mentioned.
Don't
forget
that
amrit
is
gonna,
be
around
on
discussions
after
his
session
for
30
minutes.
So
if
you
have
any
questions
head
over
to
get
up
satellite
dot
com,
slash
discussions,
so
with
that,
let's
welcome
amrits,
hey
ruth.
A
A
O
Hey
guys,
hello,
good
morning,
everyone
yeah
current.
I
also
my
mouse
timers
as
well,
when
I
say
international
lives.
It
is
it's
difficult.
So
thank
you
for
that
great
introduction.
I
am
amrit
pillai
and,
to
be
honest,
I
really
don't
have
much
to
say
about
myself,
except
that
I
got
insanely
lucky
when
building
a
personal
project
of
mine,
a
simple
resume
builder
called
reactive
resume.
O
I
could
end
this
talk
right
here
right
now
for
those
who
already
know
what
that
is,
but
do
stick
around,
I
think
you
might
enjoy
this.
O
Finally,
I'll
also
be
talking
about
how
you
can
adopt
iet
n
into
your
apps
today,
and
also
some
tools
to
help
you
in
the
process
cool.
So,
let's
head
on
over
to
the
link
on
the
screen,
this
is
rx
residue.me
and
I'm
going
to
be
logging
in
right
now
into
the
app
on
this
screen.
You
can
create
multiple
resumes
depending
on
your
job
profile,
clicking
on
your
resume
you're,
taken
to
the
resume
builder
and
while
you're
on
the
screen,
you
can
edit
stuff,
like
your
name.
O
And
you
can
see,
watch
it
instantly
change
in
the
preview.
On
the
left
side
you
can
edit
a
bunch
of
sections
and
on
the
right
you
can
change
layouts
organize
your
layout.
You
can
switch
between
templates,
organize
layouts.
You
can
change
colors
even
for
fonts
or
a
lot
of
other
things.
O
You
can
even
export
your
resume
as
a
pdf
or
you
can
share
a
url
with
anyone
who
would
want
the
latest
copy
of
your
resume,
but
all
that's
great.
The
crux
of
today's
conversation
is
right
here:
languages
reactive
resume
is
currently
available
in
26,
different
languages
and
counting.
I
can
simply
switch
to
a
language
like,
let's
say
german,
and
it
would
change
the
interface
completely
and
also
certain
tokens
used
within
the
resume.
O
O
O
With
the
help
of
my
friends,
it
was
used
by
a
few
people
here
locally,
but
once
it
got
a
bit
of
traction
on
sites
like
reddit
or
hacker
news,
that's
when
a
lot
of
users
as
well
chimed
in
and
added
translations
for
their
own
languages,
all
that's
great!
But
what
was
it
good
for
having
added
all
these
languages
or
even
more
having
to
develop
the
architecture
to
be
able
to
translate
the
app
because
it
wasn't
easy
for
one
increase
collaboration?
O
O
Secondly,
positive
conversions.
Now,
if
this
project
had
some
kind
of
premium
model,
I
could
tell
you
how
this
helped
me
in
making
a
lot
of
money,
but
sadly
it
had
none
of
these
things
since
reactive
resume
is
a
non-profit
project.
I
only
measured
conversions
by
analyzing
how
many
people
are
talking
about
the
project
and
thus
spreading
the
word
to
those
who
need
it.
O
One
specific
example
to
this
is
that
when
I
started
having
people
translate,
the
app
to
european
languages,
like
german
or
french
people
from
these
regions
were
requesting
for
a
special
type
of
template
called
europass,
which
is
widely
used
there.
This
is
something
I
would
have
never
known
about
if
it
weren't
for
them.
O
O
This
also
made
it
use
possible
for
users
of
advanced
stages
or
non-english
speaking
natives
to
navigate
the
user
interface
without
any
aid.
A
small
example
of
this
is
that
I've
developed
many
projects
before,
but
when
I
showed
reactive
resume
to
my
dad,
who
is
a
native
tamil
speaker,
he
was
able
to
use
it
just
like
how
I
imagined
anybody
else
to
be
using
it
soon
enough.
O
He
was
sharing
the
link
to
the
project
with
his
friends
and
family
on
various
whatsapp
groups,
as
more
stats
do,
and
this
turned
into
a
viral
marketing
campaign
that
I
would
have
that
would
have
never
even
crossed
my
mind,
all
right,
okay,
taking
a
quick
detour
from
our
regularly
scheduled
programming.
Here's
a
neat
gif,
my
conscience,
wouldn't
let
me
be
free
if
I
hadn't
kept
at
least
one
resume
related
gif
in
the
presentation.
O
So
that's
where
it
is
a
quick
shout
out
to
the
fans
of
the
office,
all
right,
so
getting
back
now,
we've
briefly
gone
through
the
advantages
of
having
an
architecture
where
you
allow
translations
for
your
app.
O
On
top
of
this,
implementing
an
architecture
to
include
translations
might
be
time
consuming,
but
a
very
fruitful
task.
In
the
end,
you
can
make
use
of
libraries
like
iet
next
to
incorporate
the
architecture
necessary
to
try,
allow
translations
into
your
app.
O
Next,
you
can
use
a
translation
management
platform
such
as
crowdin
to
help
you
manage
your
different
languages
and
strings
this
aids
in
non-tech
folks
as
well.
To
help
you
translate
your
app
without
having
to
clone
your
github
repo
and
edit
a
json
file
without
any
context,
a
big
big
shout
out
to
github's
student
developer
back
here.
If
you
have
access
to
this,
it
has
a
lot
of
offers
for
much
more
advanced
and
feature
rich
language
manager,
management
platforms
that
you
can
use
for
your
public
or
private
repositories.
O
Ga
11n
is
the
father
of
all
buzzwords
globalization.
It
simply
means
to
make
your
existing
product
available
to
a
global
market,
the
methods
of
making
a
product
global.
Well,
that's
what's
coming
next,
I
18n
is
the
one
that
I
used
to
title
the
stock
and
repeated
numerous
times
during
this
presentation,
but
it
isn't
everything
internationalization
means
to
try
to
make
your
product
cater
to
an
international
audience.
This
could
mean
that
they
speak
the
same
language
as
you,
but
have
other
differences
such
as
currency
or
date
time.
O
O
For
example,
if
you
were
to
have
a
cooking
blog,
you
wouldn't
want
to
feature
an
article
about
biryani
recipes
in
a
location,
that's
known
for
its
sweet
tooth.
You
would
want
to
tailor
some
specific
content
for
people
located
there.
Maybe
gulab
jamun
on
a
much
grander
scale.
Netflix
tries
to
incorporate
localization
by
actively
producing
content,
not
just
in
english,
but
in
other
spoken
languages
such
as
spanish,
hindi
or
even
tamil
t9n
is
all
about
translation,
making
your
user
interface
available
for
consumption
in
multiple
languages.
O
O
O
My
name
is
amrit
pillai
and
you
can
reach
out
to
me
through
my
website
at
amritpillai.com
or
on
my
email
at
hello.
Amritpillai.Com
I'll
also
be
available
to
answer
any
questions
you
might
have
at
the
github
discussions
board,
where
I'll
also
be
sharing
links
to
this
slide
and
other
resources
spoken
for
in
this
talk,
so
yeah
come
say:
hi.
O
H
Wow
wow,
you
know,
arisha
amrit
is
talking
about
internationalization.
Yes,
I
got
it.
Okay,
i18n
and
localization,
especially
his
mention
around
gulab
jamun,
really
made
me
very,
very,
very
excited.
Actually
you
know,
but
that
was
really
interesting
to
know
about.
You
know
those
that
that
quick
talk,
lightning
talk.
He
had
around
reactive
resume
and
you
know
how
he
was
able
to
internationalize.
H
You
know
I
should
probably
start
creating
something
you
know
for
it
anyhow,
so
don't
forget
that
amrit
is
gonna,
be
around
on
get
up
discussion
so
head
over
to
github
satellite
dot
com,
slash
discussions
where
you
can
find
him
and
ask
all
your
questions.
That's
again,
slash
satellite.com,
all
right
so
anisha.
What
do
we
have
coming
up?
Next?
We
had
like
one
lightning
talk.
I
Yeah,
so
you
really
don't
want
to
blink
again
because
guess
what
we
have
another
second
lightning
talk
coming
up
right
now
as
well,
and
that
session
is
flutter
and
github
how
open
source
really
changed.
My
life
in
this
session
you'll
see
how
flutter
and
github
can
really
be
applied
to
real-world
cases
as
well
and
taking
us
through
that
journey.
I
H
I
H
P
Change
my
life,
hello.
Everyone
welcome
to
my
session
flutter
and
github
how
open
source
changed
my
life?
Well,
I'm
kamal,
I'm
a
gdm,
flutter
and
dart
a
youtuber
and
a
mentor.
Well,
the
session
is
not
the
usage
session
where
you
talk
about
or
endorse
about
a
technology
or
a
tool.
Here,
I'm
going
to
share
my
experience
and
the
importance
of
open
source
and
how
businesses
are
adopting
open
source
and
also
how
it
impacted
my
career
and
choosing
one
changed.
My
life
and
building
a
sustainable
products.
P
I
think
if
it's
managed
right
and
if
it
is
delivering
an
industrial
strength
system
that
meets
user
needs
and
provides
solution,
there
are
which
are
fully
extendable
maintainable
over
a
long
period
of
time.
The
resulting
code
is
so
much
consistent
and
easier
to
manifest.
So,
let's
see
what
was
my
working
style
prior
to
open
source?
Definitely
it
was
enterprise
and
closed
project.
P
In
fact,
I
was
quite
content
with
it
and
definitely
open
source
or
closed
source
had
a
lot
of
pros
and
cons
where
you
had
strict
guidelines
and
a
very
organized
way
of
managing
things,
whether
it
could
be
designing
documents
or
coding
and
testing
or
avoiding
you
know
what
I
I
feel,
that
most
of
the
enterprise
organizations
or
software's
they
try
avoiding
taking
risk
as
much
as
possible
with
a
lot
of
approvals
rules,
protocols
and
finally,
the
information
was
always
private.
We
had
less
number
of
input
information
being
exposed.
P
Some
of
the
pros
that
I
would
say
about
an
enterprise
or
an
open
source
or
a
closed
source
would
be
good,
supportive
system,
user
friendliness
and
unified
experience,
and
I
was
pretty
content
with
this
style
of
working
well
before
I
start
dwelling
into
open
source.
Let's
see
how
and
when
did
open
source
really
start.
P
P
In
1990
we
had
the
first
version
of
linux
was
introduced,
mozilla
was
started,
open
source
initiative
was
started
and
2000
we
had
apache,
which
was
developed
and
maintained
by
open
source.
We
had
mysql
the
first
database
php,
which
was
almost
installed
on
more
than
2409
million
websites
and
with
2.1
million
web
servers
and
the
software
which
we
use
day
in
and
day
out,
wordpress
vlc
player,
notepad
plus
plus
ubuntu
android
flutter,
and
the
list
keeps
on
going
so
once
that's
all
indicate.
P
This
clearly
says
that
all
companies
are
adopting
open
source
and
it's
become
the
future.
Now
so
did
you
know,
as
per
the
survey,
44
percent
of
the
organization
are
using
open
source
as
a
resource
or
the
as
the
rescue
operations
and
companies
have
started.
Changing
the
policy
saying,
do
you
have
open
source
skills
or
have
you
contributed
to
open
source
rather
than
asking?
Are
you
expertise
in
a
particular
skill,
so
this
kind
of
gives
us
a
pinch
that
companies
are
really
welcoming
and
adopting
open
source
and
the
kind
of
impact
it's
creating
in
the
market.
P
P
P
P
So
if
you
ask
me
now,
okay
come
on
okay,
we
got
to
know
open
source.
We
know
that
it's
been
started
way
back
then.
How
do
I
get
started
if
you're
a
newbie
and
if
you're,
already
working
on
it
good?
But
if
you
ask
me
where
to
start
first
kind
of
look
for
the
popular
projects
on
languages
on
github,
where
we
get
a
monthly
or
a
weekly
report
talking
about
how
the
projects
are
being
performing
types
of
projects,
so
projects
could
be
security,
it
could
be
virtual
reality,
ai
or
flutter,
or
a
simple
text.
Editor.
P
P
Then,
okay,
fine,
I
got
to
know
the
project
now.
What
next
start
fixing
the
bugs
or
pull
request
or
documentation?
Trust
me
documentation
plays
a
very
important
role,
which
most
of
the
projects
really
lack
in
it.
If
you're
really
good.
At
writing
articles
documentation.
Why
don't
you
start
with
one
or
it
could
be
a
clean
code?
Clean
code
doesn't
mean
to
just
remove
the
comments
or
cleaning
up
your
code.
P
I
mean
trying
to
reinvent
the
wheel
or
instead
of
reinventing
the
wheel,
try
to
fix
the
functionality
of
doing
a
various
functions
or
something
like
that
so
understand
what
this
open
source
project
is
all
about.
How
much
time
you
need
to
spend
on
it
potentially.
Is
it
used
by
how
who
are
the
users
or
what
are
the
problems
that
this
project
has
been
going
through?
So
try
to
probe
these
kind
of
questions
and
then
try
working
on
the
open
source,
then
what
next?
P
P
So
I
feel
that
instead
of
reinventing
wheel,
try
to
look
for
the
softwares
which
are
licensed,
try
to
play
around
with
it
and
if
you
find
any
feature
that
could
be
actually
open
sourced,
go
ahead
and
do
it
what's
stopping
you
from
doing
one
and
that's
how
my
journey
started
into
flutter
and
github
really
played
a
very
vital
role
in
achieving
this
journey
to
me.
So
if
you
ask
me
what
flutter
is
flutters
is
google's
ui
toolkit
for
building
this
beautiful
natively
compiled
applications
for
mobile
web
desktop
from
a
single
code
base.
P
Let
me
reiterate
that
point
from
a
single
code
base
we
recently
launched
frota2
and
it's
the
same
code
that
ships
the
native
code
to
5
operating
system.
Yes,
you
just
listened
to
me.
I
said
5
operating
system,
android
windows,
mac
linux
and
we
also
experience
targeting
browsers,
like
chrome,
firefox,
safari
and
edge
flutter
can
be
embedded
in
cars,
tv,
smart
home
appliances,
providing
most
pervasive
and
portable
experience
for
an
ambient
computing
world,
and
you
can
see
the
beauty
of
flutter
in
my
next
slide.
P
So
this
was
one
of
the
projects
which
was
developed
using
open
source
where
we
have
all
the
aggregations
of
libraries
built
by
the
community
for
the
community
and
it's
purely
community
driven.
You
can
see
the
libraries
you
can
see
the
entire
code.
You
can
see
the
pull
request.
P
You
can
see
issues
being
tracked,
so
everything
is
free
and
open
source
and
github
plays
a
very
big
role
in
getting
this
done,
and
these
are
a
couple
of
open
source
sample
projects
created
by
developers
like
you
and
me
where
this
was
built
by
the
rife
tool,
and
then
we
had
the
animations
and
the
dragon.
All
this
has
been
open
sourced.
Nothing
is
kind
of
proprietary
or
licensed.
P
So
these
are
the
kind
of
work
communities
doing
when
we
have
these
awesome
tools
like
github
and
we
have
flutter
sdk,
and
this
is
one
more
search
tool
which
is
called
the
dart
pad,
where
you
can
directly
on
online
use
the
online
browser
to
build
these
applications.
All
you
need
to
know
is
just
the
dart
language
and
you're
good
to.
P
P
And
then
moving
on,
we
also
had
sample
plugins
created
by
the
community
people,
where
these
all
are
kind
of
issues
that
we
face
in
our
daily
life,
and
we
already
have
this
ready-made,
plug-ins
and
user
just
has
to
plug
in
and
use
them
and
they're
good
to
go.
This
is
also
open-sourced,
so
flutter.
If
you'd
like
to
get
connected,
you
can
find
ways
to
get
connected
twitter
github.
P
Anyway,
you
will
get
connected
with
flutter,
and
I
think
this
is
something
that
is
also
very
important
for
building
a
very
rich
awesome
community
and
we
have
one
such
community
called
flutterista,
where
we
are,
if
you're
interested
in
joining
one.
It's
actually,
if
you
identify
as
a
woman
or
a
non-binary
who
have
an
interest
in
flutter,
join
this
community,
it's
been
run
by
two
awesome:
flutterstar,
daniel
and
stephanie.
P
If
you
want
an
invite,
just
let
me
know
and
I'll
send
you
an
invite
and
you
can
get
connected
so
another
open
source
that
I'm
currently
working
is
application.
Library,
engineering
group,
it
is
focused
on
building
reusable
application
components
that
covers
all
platforms
like
android,
ios
and
harmony.
Yes,
you
heard
it
right
harmony,
os
it's
an
operating
system
designed
for
smart
devices
like
smart
tv,
and
it
has
been
used
as
a
mobile
operating
system.
P
Here
we
try
to
build
libraries
that
support
various
fields
ranging
from
health
banking.
I
am
media
music,
you
name
them
and
we
have
it
there.
We
are
targeting
and
you
are
ux
design
to
deployment
reusability
at
each
stage
and
we
are
trying
to
minimize
the
r
d
efforts
in
building
the
innovative
solution
in
a
popular
middleware
platforms.
P
Our
vision
speaks
our
work
and
the
process
involved
in
building
the
first
free,
open
source
community
and
the
structure
of
this
reusable
component
architecture
is
pretty
simple.
Your
functional
definition,
your
multiple
layouts
and
your
configuration
part
whether
it's
an
action
handlers
or
it
is
an
icon
and
you
at
the
end.
You
have
the
end
results.
P
If
you'd
like
to
get
connected
with
this
community,
you
can
connect
using
all
these
channels
and
free
fields
to
contribute
open
source
partner
with
us
and
we'll
be
glad
to
have
you
and
yeah.
That's
it
for
today's
session.
I
think
open
source
is
the
future.
We
can
see
mobile
web
cloud.
Solutions
are
increasingly
built
predominantly
on
open
source
infrastructure.
P
H
H
Oh,
that
is,
that
is
really
nice.
You
know
anisha
right
to
to
learn
about
kamal's
journey
about
flutter
and
all
the
work
that
you
know
that
she's
been
doing
so
again,
a
reminder
that
kamal
will
be
out
on
get
up
discussions.
So
if
you
have
any
questions
for
her
head
over
to
getupsatellite.com
discussions
and
drop
in
a
note
to
her
anisha,
you
know
I
I
noticed
so
many
octocats
out
there
in
your.
In
your
background,
you
know
it's,
yes!
Is
that
a
puzzle
of
octocats.
I
Yes,
that
is
actually
a
puzzle
and
there
are
thousands
of
octa
cats
in
there.
It
actually
took
me
what
I
want
to
say
about
eight
and
a
half
hours
to
complete
over
a
span
of
like
three
four
days,
and
it
was
pretty
tough.
You
know,
I
I
think,
there's
like
400
and
something
odd,
odd
pieces
in
there,
but
once
I
completed
it,
I
was
like
wow
this.
This
definitely
has
to
be
framed
and
popped
on
the
wall
ready
for
satellite,
which
I
did,
but
you
know
what
I
would
love
it.
I
H
Oh
yes,
you
know
there
are.
There
are
many
octocats
out
here
as
well,
though
not
completely
visible.
You
can.
You
can
see
it
right
around
me
and
a
lot
of
different
things
that
the
octa
cats
out
there
are
doing.
But
yes
with
that
one
other
thing
that
I
want
to
remind
all
of
you
is
the
octocad
generator.
So
you
know
you
can
actually
go
and
build
and
customize
your
own
octa
cad.
It's
really
cool,
you
know,
I'm
pretty
sure.
H
Anisha
might
have
her
own
octocat,
also
hidden
somewhere
out
over
there
in
the
background,
but
you
can
go
create
your
own
octocad
generator
octocad
on
the
optical
generator,
so
just
head
over
to
myoctocat.com,
and
you
can
you
can
customize,
you
can
add,
you
know
like
really
different
attires
and
you
know
accessories
and
a
whole
lot
of
cool
stuff.
So
if
you
do
create,
one
do
share
with
us
on
twitter
and
you
can
tag
us
using
add
getavidya
and
also
use
the
hashtag
hashtag
satellite.
You
know.
H
I
Yes,
so
we
have
another
great
panel
discussion
coming
up
and
it's
all
about
helping
fight
covid19
using
github,
and
it's
actually
a
wonderful
story
about
how
the
open
source
community
can
really
help
with
health
related
projects,
and
we
have
actually
two
two
speakers
for
this
session.
The
first
is
anand
chaudhary,
who
is
the
creator
of
corona
2020
he's
also
a
github
star,
as
well
he's
been
featured
in
forbes
30
under
30
and
the
dutch
financial
times
list
of
most
innovative
entrepreneurs
and
professionals
in
the
netherlands,
which
is
pretty
amazing
and
joining
him.
I
We
also
have
richa
kumar
who's,
the
senior
director
at
github
and
we're
actually
going
to
get
double
the
amount
of
richer
at
this
year's
event,
because
she's
also
going
to
be
part
of
another
panel
tomorrow
on
crossing
the
border
of
languages
with
github
as
well
and
don't
forget
to
engage
on
discussions
and
because
they'll
be
hanging
around
there
as
well.
To
answer
all
of
your
questions
too.
So
with
further
ado,
I
do
over
to
you.
Q
Q
We
are
about
a
year
into
what
has
now
become
a
new
normal
kovit
19
has
had
a
significant
impact
around
the
world,
but
alongside
all
the
uncertainty
and
the
severity,
we
have
also
seen
heartwarming
and
inspiring
initiatives
by
a
global
and
eclectic
set
of
people.
You
know
be
it
scientists,
policy
makers,
government
officials,
concerned
citizens
or
developers
and
they've
all
been
working
together
at
a
feverish
pace.
To
help
alleviate
some
of
the
impact
of
this
pandemic.
Q
Indeed,
an
inspiring
story,
anand
and
so
over
to
you.
We
are
eager
to
hear
more
about
how
this
journey
started,
where
we
are
along
the
way
and
specifically
how
technology
and
github
has
helped
you
in
your
efforts.
R
Yeah,
absolutely
it
it
just
happened
to
be.
It
was
not
well
planned
in
the
beginning,
I
usually
live
in
the
netherlands,
and
I
came
back
to
india
because
I
was
like
you
know:
it's
lockdown
season,
you're
gonna
work
from
home
anyway,
so
why
be
away
from
family?
R
And-
and
I
was
like
okay-
let
me
just
get
a
flight
ticket-
maybe
couple
weeks,
if
not
more,
but
then
that
turned
into
a
couple
months
and
then
even
longer-
and
now
it's
been
almost
exactly
a
year
that
I've
been
here
and
in
fact
I'm
gonna
go
back
in
about
10
days.
Finally,
I
got
the
flight
ticket
back,
but
but
so
when
I
came
came
here
for
the
first
time
I
was
doing
my
10
day,
quarantine
period.
R
I
think
it
was
two
weeks
back
then,
as
soon
as
I
landed
and
my
uncle
who
runs
unifiers,
which
is
a
social
infrastructure
company
where
they
focus
on
you
know,
training
and
skilling
people
of
india.
He
came
to
me
and
he
said
you
know
it's
it,
there's
not
that
much
different
in
our
life.
You
know
we're
working
from
home.
We
live
in
air
conditioned
department,
but
there
are
so
many
migrant
workers
out
there.
R
So
these
are
people
who
come
from
villages
and
smaller
cities
in
india
who
find
daily
labor
jobs,
where
you
know
they
earn
money
day
to
day
almost
like
hand
to
mouth,
and
now
that
there
is
a
nationwide
lockdown
in
place.
They
don't
have
work
anymore
and
because
of
the
lockdown
also
they
cannot
go
back
home.
So
they're
stuck
here
in
the
cities,
with
literally
no
idea
how
they're
gonna
feed
their
family
tonight
and
so
from
this
place
of
privilege.
R
Is
that
anything
that
we
can
do
and
we
you
know
for
me,
I'm
a
technology
entrepreneur.
My
whole
background
is
in
startups.
I've
been
building
companies
since
I
was
in
school
through
university
now,
and
so
for
me,
it's
always
like.
Oh
okay,
there's
a
problem.
I'm
gonna
build
an
app
for
that
right,
there's
always
a
technological
solution
in
mind,
but
of
course
you
you
have
to
kind
of
focus
on
the
real
grassroots
work
and,
and
so
how
we
started
is.
R
I
was
like:
okay,
let's
see
who's
in
my
friend
circle,
and
so
we
you
know,
we
built
a
dream
team,
almost
of
students
and
entrepreneurs,
professionals
and
corporates
startups
journalists,
just
volunteers
in
general,
and
we
decided
we're
gonna
get
on
a
zoom
call
every
morning
and
then
see
what
we
can
do
about
this.
So
I
started
with
building
just
a
github
organization
and
said:
okay,
let's
get
started
from
here.
So
let
me
quickly
share
my
screen
and
then
I'm
going
to
show
you
the
repo.
R
Yeah,
so
you
know
I
started
like
I
do
with
all
of
my
products
right.
Let's
just
build
a
github
organization
and
we
started
by
building
a
website
for
corona
2020.
This
is
our
website.
It's
a
pretty
simple
place
where
you
can
get
all
the
information
about
the
impact
about
all
the
data,
about
what
we're
working
on
right
now
and
and
like
you
already
said,
our,
we
decided
that
the
best
way
to
tackle
this
problem
is
to
build
a
dry
russian
kit.
R
So
we
decided
that
we
want
to
raise
money
and
make
these
kits
and
distribute
them
as
much
as
we
can
just
a
little
bit
about
the
site
in
case
you're
curious,
it's
based
on
emergency
site,
which
is
an
open
source
project
that
came
out
right
during
the
pandemic,
with
the
idea
that
we
might
want
to
build
websites
that
we
want
to
be
super
fast
in
emergencies.
Q
Technology,
great
and
I
know
that
in
current
2020,
you
use
a
lot
of
github
action,
workflows
for
automating
common
tasks
that
are
otherwise
manual
and
tedious
and
time
consuming
right.
R
Yeah,
I'd
love
to
tell
you
more
about
that.
In
fact,
I
want
to
tell
you
a
quick
story
first,
because
in
the
beginning
it
was
like.
I
said
it
was
a
zoom
call
and
a
bunch
of
volunteers,
and
we
would
just
have
this
big
google
sheet
where
we
would
just
have
all
of
the
data
coming
in.
You
know
what
are
the
donations
coming
in?
Where
are
we
buying
the
food
from?
How
do
we
assemble
the
kit
and
then
how
do
we
distribute
it?
R
And
it
was
just
one
huge
sheet
and
imagine
like
how
messy
that
spreadsheet
can
be,
and
so
my
friend
and
volunteer
shivek
wrote
this
article
about
how
he
likes
to
call
it
closure
of
concurrency
model
head
of
kind
of
fix
this,
and
so
this
is
what
he
calls
like
the
first
version
of
our
runtime,
where
everything's
kind
of
running
in
a
javascript
main
thread
where
we
call
these
async
functions,
which
get
data
in
and
bring
data
out.
R
But
this
can
get
very
messy
very
fast,
so
we
decided
that
we
want
to
kind
of
switch
to
a
closure
concurrency
model
and
if
you're
interested,
you
should
go
through
this
article.
I
have
a
link
in
the
discussion,
but
how
we
switched
gears
was
now
everything
is
kind
of
happening
in
cds
and
sets.
R
So
just
imagine
a
donor
life
cycle
model
where
we
receive
information
about
a
new
donation
coming
in
and
then
we
would
say:
okay,
we
we
will
identify
the
donor,
we
would
move
it
to
a
column,
would
say,
is
ready
for
receipt
and
then
we
would
use,
for
example,
an
automated
github
actions
workflow,
which
would
generate
a
receipt.
So
let
me
actually
show
you
how
this
works
in
airtable,
which
is
the
client
we
use
to
make
this
work.
R
R
We
would
contact
them
and
then,
when
we
move
this
card
to
ready
for
generating
receipt,
we
run
a
github
actions,
workflow
wayward,
which
runs
puppeteer,
which
is
a
headless
chromium
automation,
tool
which
generates
a
pdf
because
in
india
for
example,
when
you
contribute
to
a
non-profit,
you
get
an
atg
tax
receipt
which
you
can
use
for
your
taxes
to
claim
that
as
a
deductible.
But
of
course
we
didn't
want
to
do
all
of
this
work
manually,
because
the
goal
was
all
of
the
manual
work
should
be
limited
to
focusing
on
real
grassroot
distributions.
R
So
then
we
move
it
move
it
and
then
that's
the
whole
how
the
system
works.
Another
good
example
is
distribution
because
we
use
the
same
logic.
We
fi
we
get
uncategorized
leads
from
people,
and
then
we
ask
them
to
make
a
list
of
phone
numbers
or
other
cards
so
that
we
can
know
that
it's
a
real
distribution.
R
There
are
real
people
in
this
part
of
town
who
need
our
help,
and
then
we
approve
the
request,
assign
a
distributor,
deliver
it
and-
and
one
important
thing
for
us
was
transparency,
because
if
we're
asking
people
to
give
us
money
and
we're
saying
we're
going
to
feed
people,
we
need
some
evidence,
and
so
we
decided
that
for
every
single
person
who
gets
a
karuna
2020
dry
russian
kit,
we
would
ask
to
take
that
photo,
and
so,
after
the
delivery,
we
move
it
into
the
receive
distribution
pictures
column
and
we
attach
all
the
photos
that
we
received.
R
So,
of
course,
this
is
a
privacy
issue
right,
so
we
decided
that
we
want
to
blur
their
faces,
at
least
so.
For
example,
this
is
a
real
photo
of
a
real
person
getting
our
kit
and
again
using
a
github
actions.
Workflow,
we
use
a
python
library
called
face,
blur
a
custom
version
of
it,
which
takes
all
of
these
photos
in
automatically
blurs
them
out
and
then
uploads
them
to
our
cdn.
R
So
we
created
a
github
repository
called
current2020
open
data
because
we
wanted
to
make
sure
that
we
are
accountable
to
our
donors
and
everyone
gets
access
to
all
of
our
data,
so
how
it
works
is
literally
the
same
data
that
we
have
here
in
airtable
using
the
github
actions
status.
Workflow
shows
up
here
as
api
endpoints.
So,
for
example,
if
you
look
at
the
api
endpoint
for
donations.json,
you
can
literally
see
every
single
donation
where
it
came
from
who
gave
it
to
us
how?
R
How
much
was
it
for
and
the
same
with
distributions
and
so
on?
And
all
of
this
happens
completely
automatically
in
this
case,
using
a
github
actions
workflow
that
takes
data
from
airtable
and
then
generates
json
endpoints.
And
then
we
publish
this
entire
repository
on
a
github
page's
static
website
with
which
you
can
consume
these
api
endpoints.
So
everything
happens
automatically
and
that's
kind
of
a
little
bit
about
our
tech
with
the
github
actions,
workflows.
Q
Thanks
anna,
that
makes
a
lot
of
sense.
It's
great,
to
see
this
level
of
transparency
and
authenticity.
That's
also
getting
built
in
you
know
into
the
system,
because
I
can
totally
see
how
that
will
build
the
trust
and
the
confidence
among
the
people
who
would
like
to
contribute
in
the
form
of
donations
and
and
really
see
their
their
money.
Q
You
know
reaching
the
right
people
and,
and
really
it's
it's
wonderful,
to
see
that
github
actions
has
helped
you
to
automate
these
workflows,
and
you
know,
make
you
more
efficient
so
that
you're
able
to
focus
on
what
you
do
best
and
just
great
to
see
that.
So
what
do
you
see
as
some
of
the
next
set
of
challenges
ahead
and
and
how
can
the
community
contribute.
R
Yeah,
I
think
the
community
has
been
such
a
large
part
of
what
we're
doing
here
whenever
I'm
free.
You
know
I
just
like
to
browse
through
the
github
topic
for
covet
19
and
then
just
kind
of
scroll
around
to
see
what
people
are
up
to
and
there
are
such
great
resources
out
there.
R
R
Another
repo
that
I
really
like
is
covet
19
india
react,
which
is
a
react
website,
written
also
by
a
set
of
volunteers
around
the
world,
and
this
is
what
it
looks
like
you
can
go
to
that
little
website
and
you
can
see
all
the
cases.
Statewide
data
find
information
about
vaccination,
get
trends.
R
It's
a
really
fast,
really
nice
site
written
entirely
in
react
by
a
group
of
contributors
from
around
the
world,
and
I
want
to
highlight
one
more,
which
is
corona
cli,
because
this
is
especially
interesting
to
developers
it's
made
by
my
friend
and
fellow
github
star
emma
and,
as
the
name
implies,
it's
literally
a
command
line
interface,
where
you
can
get
data
about
the
coronavirus,
citywise
countrywide
statewide
in
your
terminal.
So
so,
if
you're,
if
you're
a
developer,
you
don't
even
need
to
leave
your
terminal
to
get
up-to-date
statistics.
R
So
I
think
the
community
is
really
coming
together
and
you
know
people
it's
so
amazing
to
see
all
of
these
people
from
around
the
world
come
together
and
try
to
contribute
to
open
source
and
make
sure
everyone
has
access
to
the
right
data.
Transparent
data
and
people
are
all
doing
this
from
their
homes
in
their
free
time
in
a
volunteer,
led
effort,
and
so
I
think
really
the
solution
to
all
of
these
challenges
of
finding.
R
You
know
honest
data
in
in
mitigating
the
pandemic,
with,
even
if
you
look
at
vaccination
data
is
all
of
these
volunteer
led
efforts
that
make
all
of
this
information
that
is
typically,
you
know,
gate
kept
and
and
make
it
open
source.
Q
That
sounds
good,
great
and-
and
I
believe
you
mentioned
that
as
part
of
coronado
2020
as
well.
You
have
leveraged
certain
open
source
projects
like
you
talked
about
the
emergency
services.
Q
Kind
of
maybe
you
can
tell
us
a
little
bit
about
that
experience.
You
know
consuming
and
building
on
top
of
somebody
else's
work,
and
also,
how
do
you
feel
about
you
know
from
the
work
that
you've
done?
Do
you
see
some
best
practices
emerging
for
non-profits?
Q
You
know
when
it
comes
to
you
know,
sort
of
building
some
of
these
workflows,
and
you
know
how
do
you
think
about
that.
R
Yeah,
absolutely
you
know
just
as
an
example.
If
you
look
at
our
website
repository,
we
don't
just
have
an
open
source
project
so
that
we
can
get
the
free,
github
actions
minutes.
The
idea
is
we're
building.
R
On
top
of
all
of
these
great
open
source
projects
like
I
gave
you
the
example
of
the
blurring
project
which
we
forked
and
shivek
added
a
feature
that
we
could
do
all
of
these
requests
in
parallel,
rather
than
series
so
that
it
happens
much
faster
and
it's
just
a
simple
python
library
that
takes
any
photo
in
and
gives
you
a
blurred
version
of
it,
and
this
was
very
important
to
us,
because
we
knew
that
we
have
to
balance
individual
privacy
with
making
sure
we
are
accountable
and
we
share
photos
for
example.
R
So
we
it's
we're
really
building
on
top
of
this
years
of
effort
by
other
open
source
people
and
and,
like
you
said,
with
non-profits,
usually
you
see
there's
a
lot
of
manual
work
like
I
gave
you
the
example
of
the
atg
tax
receipts.
People
usually
generate
these
by
hand
in
an
excel
document
and
then
export
it
as
a
pdf
and
then
send
it
to
people,
and
in
our
case
we
would
just
literally
have
an
a
table
record
that
we
got
a
donation
in.
R
We
would
manually,
verify
it
and
move
it
to
a
column,
and
then
everything
happens
automatically
that
we
use
an
api
to
send
them
a
message.
We
use
puppeteer
to
generate
a
pdf,
and
then
we
use
node
mailer
to
programmatically
email
it
to
them
as
an
attachment,
and
so
the
idea
was
why
stop
here
right?
We
are
just
volunteers
who,
for
example,
I
run
a
technology
company
in
switzerland.
R
We're
only
doing
this
in
our
free
time
as
a
weight
is
a
really
small
way
to
give
back,
but
there
are
real
non-profits
who
we
partnered,
with,
for
example,
for
the
distribution
who
are
doing
this
every
day
and
they've
been
doing
it
for
years.
So
how
can
we
kind
of
help
them
with
our
tech
to
take
it
forward
and
and
and
one
really
powerful
thing
we
did
here-
was
guides
so
on
our
website.
R
You
can
have
a
look
at
all
of
the
all
of
these
free
and
open
source
guides
that
we
have
written.
All
of
our
volunteers
have
contributed
to
these
and-
and
they
tell
us
about,
for
example,
the
face
blur
and
identity
protection
guide
where
you
can
read
how
why
do
we
want
to
do
this?
What
parts
of
the
face
should
we
redact
and
what
technology
do
we
use?
How
do
you
install
it?
How
do
you
use
it
and
so
on,
and
for
and
even
like
more
specific
things
like
are
russian
kid?
R
How
do
you
assemble
it?
What
should
go
in
each
kit?
How
do
you
package
it?
How
do
you
make
sure
the
people
who
are
distributing
them
are
always
safe
or
our
distribution
management
guide
about?
How
do
we
manage
distributions
our
donor
lifecycle
management
guide,
where
you
can
have
a
look
at?
How
do
we
get
people
to
fill
the
form
when
we
get
the
donation?
What
do
you
do
when
you
don't
know
who
a
donor
is?
How
do
you
offend
them?
R
So
the
idea
is,
we
wrote
all
of
these
in
markdown
format
and
put
them
in
our
github
repository,
and
you
can
have
a
look
at
all
of
these
and
you
can
and
literally
like
just
things
that
are
not
related
to
the
distribution.
For
example,
our
social
media
outreach
guide
tells
you
that
hey.
We
should
tell
all
of
the
people
who
have
donated
about
what
we're
working
on.
R
How
do
you
design
each
social
media
post,
and
we
made
a
little
template
with
you,
which
you
just
had
to
edit
with
the
new
distribution,
and
then
all
of
this
also
is
completely
automated.
So
whenever
we
receive
the
photos
of
a
distribution,
we
assign
it
a
social
media
outreach
card
also
linked
to
it.
R
The
second
quick
note
is
because
of
github's
powerful
platform,
we
use
github
actions
not
just
for
automating
things,
but
also
for
scheduling,
cron
jobs,
and
then
we
use
github
pages
to
deploy
our
website.
This
literally
means
that
we
don't
need
a
server.
We
have
no
digital
ocean,
droplet
or
whatever
ec2
instance,
because
the
idea
is
all
of
our
programmatic.
R
You
know
tooling
generation
build
time.
Stuff
is
happening
in
a
github
actions
workflow,
and
so
this
is
very
powerful,
because
if
you
have
an
open
source
repo,
you
get
unlimited
free
minutes,
which
means
all
of
the
other
non-profits
that
we
work
with,
can
get
all
of
these
great
systems
in
place
literally
completely
for
free
running
in
github
actions
workflow
rather
than
using.
R
You
know,
specific
servers
that
you
have
to
pay
for,
and
so
the
idea
was
that,
with
our
guides,
where
we've
thoroughly
documented
everything
that
we're
working
on
and
with
our
source
code,
we
don't
want
it
to
stop
here
that
we're
done
with
our
part.
We
want
to
make
sure
that
other
non-profits
and
other
people
can
build
on
top
of
it
and
then
make
sure
that
we
all
do
our
little
part
to
giving
back.
Q
Makes
sense-
and
I
think
you,
you
highlighted
a
good
point
around
how
grab
actions
really
takes
away
a
lot
of
the
burden
of
you
know,
maintaining
servers
and
you
know
with
the
compute
being
with
github.
It
enables
people
to
quickly
be
able
to
really
put
their.
You
could
say
you
know
their
logic
into
action,
you
know,
and
so
so
that's
a
really
great
point
to
highlight,
and
so
so
you
know
a
lot
of
us,
you
know
we.
Q
We
all
want
to
help
others
and
we
all
have
ideas
about
it
or
maybe
the
desire
to
help.
But
not
everyone
is
able
to
convert
that
into
into
action
and
any
words
of
advice
from
you
for
others.
You
know
who
who
really
wants
to
give
back,
and
you
know
you
know
what
does
it
take
to
really
take
that
the
first
critical
step
or
what
have
been
some
things
that
have
been
important
in
enabling
you
to
succeed
in
your
efforts.
R
R
How
do
we
take
it
forward
from
here
and-
and
I
like
to
start
all
of
my
projects
like
that,
if
you
have
a
you
know
idea,
you
build
a
repo
quickly
and
just
think
about
it,
and
then
you
kind
of
take
it
forward
slowly
over
you
know,
days
and
weeks
and
years,
so
you
know
the
gatekeeping
is
non-existent.
R
Now
I
because
if
you
look
at
any
project
like
we
saw
already
in
github
satellite,
there
are
so
many
great
open
source
projects
that
all
started
as
a
tiny
idea,
and
you
want
to
build
it
into
an
open
source
product,
and
if
you
want
to
contribute
to
them,
it's
become
easier
than
ever
right.
There
are
so
many
great
guides
out
there
about.
R
How
do
you
make
your
first
pull
request
and-
and
there
are
concepts
like
good
first
good,
first
issue
or
up
for
grabs
where
you
could
filter
out
issues
that
need
help,
and
I
think
you
know
the
best
way
is
just
to
get
started,
and
you
know
I'm
saying
this,
because
usually
people
watching
get
up,
satellite
or
technical
and
the
best
way
to
give
back
could
be
spend
a
little
bit
of
your
time
in
giving
back
to
open
source
projects
that
you
use
or
open
source
projects
like
ours
that
are
trying
to
help
people
during
the
pandemic.
R
But
the
second
part
is
really
about
the
the
distribution
and
the
manual
work
right.
You
can
give
your
time
away.
You
could
volunteer
to
projects,
but
I
think
you
know,
because
for
us
personally,
it's
it's
really
about
privilege
right.
It's
about
the
fact
that
we've
been
in
lockdown
for
a
year
now
and
and
not
much
has
changed.
You
know
I
I
go
to
work
every
day
from
my
laptop,
I
get
a
good
salary.
I
I
write
code.
R
I
contribute
to
open
source
projects,
but
there
are
so
many
not
just
tens
or
hundreds,
but
thousands
and
tens
of
thousands
of
people
out
there,
whose
experience
has
been
completely
different.
Like
I
said
in
the
beginning,
migrant
workers
here
in
delhi
who
don't
know
how
they're
going
gonna
feed
their
family
tomorrow,
maybe
today,
but
just
because
the
entire
job
was
of
the
idea
that
every
day
we're
gonna
do
a
little
bit
of
work
on
a
little
bit
of
money.
And
then
somebody
takes
that
away
from
you.
R
So
I
think
it's
not
just
about
the
technical
part
of
making
your
first
pull
request,
although
that
could
be
very
powerful
as
well.
It's
about
how
can
you
look
at
your
tool
kit
right?
R
Are
you
a
designer
or
a
teacher
or
a
student
or
an
engineer,
and
what
you
know
how
to
do,
and
how
can
you
use
those
tools
as
a
way
to
give
back,
and
I
do
your
little
part
right,
because
when
you're
talking
about
this
scale,
this
pandemic
and
so
many
people
who
we
can
do
something
for
and
who
we
should
have
empathy
for
every
little
bit
helps?
And
I
think
that's
why
you
know
I
started
by
saying
just
start
by
starting.
R
Do
your
little
part
because
we're
like
tiny
compared
to
all
of
these
great
open
source
projects
out
there,
and
you
know,
with
tens
of
thousands
of
contributors
working
from
around
the
world
and
and
of
one
common
good
one
common
goal
that
you
know
there's
a
pandemic
and
we
can
spend
our
free
time
and
do
our
little
part
on
giving
back.
R
And
so
I
think
you
just
start
by
starting
look
at
what's
out
there
and
you
know
contact
people
see
how
you
can
make
your
first
pull
request
or
or
volunteer
or
give
a
little
and,
like
I
said
you
know,
we're
a
tiny
part
of
it,
but
every
part
really
counts,
and
so
you
know
I
would
say
you
shouldn't
be.
You
shouldn't,
feel
hesitated
at
all
just
start
by
starting.
Do
your
little
bit
and
then
see
you
know
what
kind
of
impact
it
can
do
for
us.
R
Q
Q
We
can
use
that
to
contribute
in
some
way
or
the
other,
and
today,
in
the
you
know,
in
the
world
we
have
platforms
like
github
that
make
it
so
much
easier
for
people
to
meet
with
other
other
people
in
the
community,
and
you
don't
necessarily
have
to
start
something
from
scratch.
You
can
join
an
existing
effort
because
something
that
you
do
can
contribute
and
add
value
and
really
it's
a
great
way
to
to
learn
and
share
and
along
the
way
to
do
some
good.
Q
So
it's
this,
you
know
your
story.
Annan
has
been
very
inspiring
to
me
for
sure,
and
I
hope
that
it's
going
to
be
the
same
for
many
others,
a
great
opportunity
to
use
their
technical
abilities
or
whatever
are
their
core
competencies
and
you
know,
contribute
and
really
start
like
you
said
it
has
been
a
pleasure
talking
to
you
ananth.
Q
Your
story
definitely
serves
as
an
example
to
so
many
others,
and
it's
great
to
see
that
you
you,
you
started,
you
put
this
into
action
and
you
leveraged
tools
and
technologies
to
help
you
do
your
best
work
and
I'm
really
proud
to
be
a
hubber
and
see
how
github
is
playing
such
a
big
role
in
enabling
people
and
it
helps
them
to
make
a
bigger
impact
in
the
world
when
it
matters.
D
A
Q
Another
and
I
will
be
on
discussions
right
after
this
looking
forward
to
engaging
with
all
of
you
in
some
great
conversations
thanks,
annan.
H
That
was
that
is
really
interesting
right,
an
issue
to
see
how
you
know
open
source
projects
can
really
help,
even
during
the
times
of
you
know
this
pandemic
all
across
wow
you,
you
have
absolutely.
Oh
that's
nice.
You
know
I
wish
I
wish
I
could.
I
could
bring
up.
You
know
one
of
those
really
all
of
the
emojis
out
here
on
the
screen
so
like
how
richard
and
anand
mentioned,
they
will
be
around
on
discussions.
H
H
So
far,
what
would
you
like
to
see
or
something
interesting
that
you
learned
tweet
out
to
us
using
the
hashtag,
hashtag,
github,
satellite
and
tag
us
as
well
using
add
github
india,
so
one
other
thing
as
a
reminder,
you're
out
here
on
the
open
source
channel,
where
we
are
discussing
a
lot
of
these
stories,
experience
of
various
different
open
source
contributors,
maintainers,
etc,
and
you
there's
also
another
channel
which
is
the
devops
channel.
H
So
you
can,
if
you're,
watching
on
getupsatellite.com,
you
can
just
go
over
to
the
other
channel
on
top,
where
our
really
good
friends,
stevia
and
mohit
are
hosting
a
lot
of
these
sessions
on
devops,
secure
development,
developer
experience,
etc.
A
whole
lot
more
happening
right
anisha.
I'm
really
excited.
I
Yes,
definitely
I'm
I'm
super
excited
and,
if
you're
wondering
what's
happening
over
on
the
devops
channel,
next
they'll
be
doing
resilience
testing
with
github
actions
using
litmus
chaos.
So
don't
forget
to
check
that
out.
But
if
you're
sticking
with
us
there's
a
whole
bunch
more
stuff
coming
your
way
as
well,
but
don't
forget
that
you
know
you
can
share
everything
that
you've
been
hearing
from
us
today.
I
I
Yes
and
don't
forget,
have
you
filled
out
the
attendee
survey?
If
not,
why
not?
You
can
check
it
out
on
the
link
which
hopefully
will
come
up
in
a
little
bit
as
well,
and
it
will
basically
say
we
want
your
feedback,
so
go
ahead
and
we
want
your
feedback.
So
let
us
know
what
you
think
about
it
so
far
as
well,
and
this
is
a
live
broadcast
as
well.
So
right
now
for
me
it
is
oh
it
just
turned
midnight
over
in
washington,
usa.
Karen,
what
time
is
it
where
you
are.
H
Well
from
where
I'm
coming
out
from,
which
is
by
galore,
it's
12
30
p.m.
Out
here
in
india,
and
all
of
our
speakers
are
joining
in,
live
for
all
of
these
sessions
with
live
q
a
and
live
discussions
as
well.
You
know
it's,
it's
really
amazing
anisha!
You
know
how
all
of
us
can
connect
during
the
times
of
these
pandemics,
where
we
might
not
be
able
to
travel
much,
but
our
speakers
are
coming
across
from
all
parts
of
india
and
even
outside
of
india
as
well
people.
Well
you
this
right!
H
Over
there,
you
anisha,
you
know
who's
coming
in
from
midnight.
You
know
sorry,
so
it's
it's
really
really
great.
I
And
I'm
I'm
definitely
excited.
I
mean
you
definitely
don't
see
me
getting
tired
yet
because
this
is
github,
satellite,
india
and
there's
just
so
much
content
that
we've
already
shared
on
both
channels
as
well
and
so
much
more
to
come
as
well.
But
karen
I
love
what
you're
wearing
right
now.
Can
you
tell
me
a
little
bit
more
about
the
jacket
that
you
have
and
what
it
means
to
you.
H
Oh
interesting,
you
know,
because
because
I've
had
this
for
quite
a
while,
but
I
thought
it's
it's
a
really
nice
opportunity
to
wear
it
right
now,
because
you
see
you
know,
there's
there's
a
lot
of
you
know
artwork
and
motives
very
similar
to
our
indian
culture
out
here.
H
You
can
actually
see
peacocks
and
you
know
a
whole
lot
of
other
things
which
might
not
be
visible
until
I
kind
of
like
stand
up
or
show
around,
but
it
just
you
know,
helps
with
the
expression
of
you
know
what
how
how
varied-
and
you
know
how
truly
our
our
culture
is.
So
it's
it's
feels
really
nice
to
nicely
having
this
great.
H
Oh,
the
next
session
is,
is
also
one
of
my
favorites,
because
many
of
us,
including
me
developers,
you
know
we
kind
of
like
looking
at
the
open
source
as
all
of
those
very
technical
developer.
Projects
which
are
out
there
on
github
right
but
but
actually
open
source
is
making
an
impact,
not
just
you
know,
within
the
lives
of
developers,
but
also
within
various
parts
of
our
lives.
We
just
you
know,
facets
of
life
itself.
You
know
so
to
talk
a
lot
more
about
that.
H
We
have
gaurav
godwani,
who
is
the
co-founder
and
director
of
civic
data,
labs
who's,
going
to
be
talking
about
the
state
of
free
and
open
source
software
in
india,
so
they
have
created
an
independent
research
report,
exploring
various
different
ways.
Open
source
is
really
making
an
impact
in
india
and
which
is
what
they're
going
to
be
talking
about
and
sharing.
H
So
with
that,
you
know,
I
would
like
to
hand
over
to
gaura,
but
before
that
remember
that
guru
is
going
to
be
around
on
discussions.
So
if
you
have
any
questions,
do
head
over
to
github
satellite.com,
slash
discussions
where
you
can
ask
him
any
of
the
questions
and
we're
gonna
pick
up.
Some
of
the
questions
live
once
kara
is
done
with
the
stalker
as
well.
So
with
that,
let's
welcome
girl,
hey
garu.
A
S
So
welcome
everyone
for
the
state
of
free
in
open
source
software,
india
discussion,
I'm
going
to
quickly
present
findings
of
our
recently
done
report,
but
before
that
quick
introduction
about
me
and
civic
data
lab,
so
I'm
going
honey.
I'm
director
co-founder
at
civic
data,
lab
civic
data
lab
works
with
the
goal
of
connecting
data,
tech,
design
and
social
science
to
strengthen
civic
engagements
in
the
country
and
how
we
do.
S
So
it's
very
important
and
for
us
to
understand
the
growth
of
free
and
open
source
software
in
the
country
and
how
we
can
play
a
major
role
in
helping
these
different
stakeholders
work
towards
a
common
shared
vision
of
increasing
india's
digital
ecosystem.
S
So
we
did
this
report
with
the
support
of
omedya
network
india.
We
interviewed
close
to
51.
First
researchers.
Practitioners
across
the
nation
did
analysis
of
63
case
studies
on
free
and
open
source
software
read
another
26
reports
which
were
on
the
similar
topic
and
framed
our
thoughts
towards
the
whole
free
and
open
source
software
ecosystem,
presented
our
findings
and
requested
eight
eminent
experts
from
the
community
to
review
the
whole
work.
S
So
just
just
just
to
get
the
basics
right,
how
we
are
defining
foss,
so
pre
and
open
source
software
is
a
software
that
is
freely
licensed
to
use.
Study
change,
improve,
contribute
upon
basically
a
piece
of
code
which
you
can
make
it
break.
It
find
different
aspects
of
usage
of
it
and
customize
it
contextualize
it
based
on
your
needs.
S
We
are
referring
fos
as
an
inclusive
term,
covering
both
the
free
software
moment
and
the
open
source
software
world,
despite
their
despite
having
different
cultures
and
ownerships,
they
have
similar
ownership
models
and
that's
what
we
are
going
to
focus
on.
So
that's
where
we
have
taken
more
inclusive
approach
of
free
and
open
source
software,
so
india
runs
on
false.
You
won't
believe
more
than
85
percent
websites.
Web
servers
are
running
on
free
and
open
source
software.
S
Most
of
this
is
something
that
you
might
be
using
daily,
but
might
but
not
be
aware
of
so
irctc
uses
a
lot
of
free
and
open
source
software
to
help
us
do
ticketing,
train
ticketing
on
time
supreme
code
of
india
uses
free
and
open
source
software
to
do
docker
management
of
all
the
cases
and
help
us
do
hearings
at
time.
S
Lic
india
also
uses
free
and
open
source
software
to
ensure
life
insurance
are
done
at
scale.
Also
bombay
stock
exchange
help
us
do
stock
trading
at
scale
using
free
and
open
source
software.
All
of
them
are
using
free
and
open
source
software,
but
most
of
them
don't
advertise
it.
So
we
don't
know
that
they
are
running
on
finer
prints
or
software,
and
very
few
of
them
actually
contribute
back
in
open
source.
That's
where
it
becomes
a
bit
more
tricky
for
us
to
participate
with
them.
S
So
imagine
given
our
developer
community,
given
all
of
you
and
the
amazing
talent
out
there.
If
we
could
have
created
an
open
source
ticketing
system,
it
would
have
gone
quite
viral
with
the
kind
of
different
use
cases
we
would
have
created
in
india
as
well
as
outside.
So
that's
what
this
report
is
all
about,
so
to
look
into
how
the
force
ecosystem
has
grown.
We
have
to
look
into
the
timeline,
so
we
have
divided
the
growth
of
free
and
open
source
software.
S
So
far
into
six
major
eras
number
one
is
the
inception
of
force,
which
is
basically
in
1886
to
1978,
where
the
whole
new
initiatives
of
free
and
open
source
software
happened.
Discussions
on
copyright
were
there
etc,
which
gradually
led
to
the
rise
of
free
software
moment.
S
The
moment
was
led
by
richard
stallman
and
other
people
from
1978
to
1989
shaping
what
the
free
software
ecosystem
looks
like
today
and
then
the
rise
of
community
businesses
happened
with
the
discussions
on
open
source
and
how
open
source
can
help
co-create
software,
in
collaboration
with
other
actors
geographically
distributed
organizations
working
on
different
kind
of
problems,
but
similar
technological
needs.
S
Then
there
are
three
parallel
errors.
The
number
one
is
the
big
tech
fights
back
the
open
source
which
started
from
1998,
but
gradually
the
big
tech
found
the
benefits
of
free
and
open
source
software
quite
helpful
for
them.
So
around
2008.
S
The
dust
has
settled
on
that
from
1999
onwards,
we
have
seen
global
proliferation
of
free
and
open
source
software
with
a
lot
of
communities
coming
to
even
india,
working
and
co-creating,
together
with
different
stakeholders
on
how
different
open
source
libraries
projects
can
be
scaled
and
expansion
in
india,
of
course,
have
grown
from
2001
onwards
and
which
I'm
going
to
deep
dive
much
more
in
detail.
S
So
we
used
to
have
annual
conferences
like
foss.n,
led
by
atul
chutness,
bringing
in
a
community
of
false
practitioners
together
discussing
how
free
and
open
source
software
ecosystem
can
grow
together.
We
also
saw
it
at
school
project
started
by
kerala
early
in
2001,
where
they
tried
to
deploy
free
and
open
source
software
in
more
than
12
000
public
schools
and
they
have
scaled
fantastically.
S
Similarly,
we
started
to
see
states
making
some
efforts
kerala
again
started
icfos,
which
is
an
international
center
for
free
and
open
source
software.
Looking
for
fostering
research
and
collaboration
on
how
softwares
could
be
created
with
the
help
of
communities,
academia
and
other
stakeholders,
we
also
saw
starting
of
groups
like
sflc,
which
talks
about
the
licensing,
the
policy,
the
legal
aspects
of
free
and
open
source
software,
and
more
and
more
supreme
courts,
supreme
court
establishment,
high
courts,
lower
courts
moving
towards
free
and
open
source
software.
S
So
there
has
been
quite
a
lot
going
on
and
gradually
what
we
are
seeing
is
more
businesses
are
evolving,
keeping
free
and
open
source
software
as
core
to
their
business
model.
We
have
seen
zero
dha
chat,
vote,
hasura
running
their
business
operations
using
free
and
open
source
software,
helping
other
businesses
scale
up
as
well.
S
So
what
this
leads
to
is
major
false
opportunities
for
us
in
india.
The
number
one
is
technical
growth,
where
we
have
an
opportunity
to
become
a
global
technology
leader
in
emerging
technologies,
which
are
very
fast
driven
like
artificial
intelligence,
big
data,
machine
learning
and
so
on.
The
enormous
amount
of
talent
in
india
is
quite
focused
to
build
libraries
and
packages
on
free
and
open
source
software
and
see
how
they
can
scale
up
the
growth.
S
So
we
need
to
invest
more
on
seeing
how
this
could
be
catalyzed
and
there
could
be
a
strategic
mission
on
moving
forward
with
the
new
emerging
tech.
Second,
one
is
the
economic
growth
with
free
and
open
source
software
and
the
ability
to
contextualize
and
localize.
The
software
we
can
drastically
include
improve
the
financial
inclusion
in
the
country,
helping
more
young
internet
users
use
internet
to
rely
on
better
public
digital
services,
better
digital
services
out
there
to
help
resolve
some
of
the
issues
they
face
in
their
locality
and,
lastly,
the
talent
growth.
S
I
mean
we
are
creating
a
common
base
approach
of
creating
knowledge,
pool
of
resources,
be
it
data,
be
it
languages,
be
a
different
variety
of
local
lived
experiences.
All
of
it
are
proliferating
in
this
software
ecosystem.
With
the
help
of
free
and
open
source
software,
so
a
lot
could
be
done
when
it
comes
to
growing
the
forest
ecosystem
and
these
stakeholders,
these
four
of
them,
are
key
in
moving
forward
the
secret
system.
The
number
one
are,
of
course,
you
people
the
community
of
free
and
open
source
software
practitioners,
researchers.
S
S
Even
schools
and
colleges
from
tier
two
tier
three
places
have
free
and
open
source
software
related
some
education,
literacy,
hobby
groups,
there
false
businesses,
some
of
them
I
recently
occurred
like
zero,
the
chat,
foot
and
all,
and
even
the
msmes
who
are
new,
emerging
technology
partners
are
now
looking
for
free
and
open
source
alternatives.
And,
lastly,
the
governments,
national,
local
and
regional
governments
are
also
moving
more
towards
free
and
open
source
software.
S
So
we're
going
to
look
into
all
four
of
them,
and
the
lens
through
which
we
are
looking
at
is
very
simple:
four
step
growth.
The
first
step
is
build
capacity,
build
capacity
to
understand
what
kind
of
free
and
open
source
software
is
out.
There
consume
ethically
work
with
different
stakeholders
to
see
what
kind
of
licenses
you
can
use
to
improve
the
growth
of
free
and
open
source
software.
S
What
kind
of
libraries
packages
are
out
there
which
can
benefit?
You
contribute
regularly.
S
Once
you
have
built
the
right
pace,
you
are
consuming
it
right,
start,
contributing
regularly
start
opening
up
issues
start
working
with
the
community
to
find
new
features,
start
participating
in
the
development
sprints
and
the
communities
out
there
to
who
are
volunteering
their
time
to
make
the
software
ecosystem
better
with
you
and
lastly,
once
you
have
started
to
contribute
regularly
it's
time
to
go
collaborate
and
co-create
and
grow
so
have
big
plans
for
how
these
softwares
can
grow
beyond
one
sector
beyond
one
problem
scale
to
other
domains.
S
S
The
number
one
rf
community
is
my
favorite
one,
so
I
think
one
thing
which
we
all
are
facing
as
a
challenge
is
the
initial
barriers
itself
for
anyone
who
is
trying
to
work
in
the
pre-enterprise
software
who
is
interested
to
contribute.
There
are
certain
initial
barriers
which
we
have
all
faced.
Let's
try
figure
out
how
we
can
curb
some
of
these
for
the
new
upcoming
talent,
so
things
like
having
leadership
programs.
S
Mentorship
programs
like
google
summer
of
code,
really
helps
bring
new
talent
to
the
existing
big,
free
and
open
source
software
ecosystems.
Investing
more
on
that
would
be
really
helpful,
helping
with
working
with
the
academia
to
find
more
such
important
opportunities
to
groom
the
upcoming
false
talent
is
something
which
we
highly
advise.
S
Second,
one
is
having
more
diversity
and
inclusivity.
We
have
seen.
Most
of
the
false
communities
are
underrepresented
by
different
marginalized
groups.
Increasing
representation
of
different
groups
is
very
essential,
not
just
to
build
a
thriving,
fast
ecosystem,
but
also
to
build
robust
software.
S
If
more
people
are
involved,
most
likely,
the
software
would
be
beneficial
for
all.
So
programs,
like
outreachy,
are
quite
helpful
for
us
to
move
in
that
direction.
Third,
one
is
constrained
to
have
more
sustained
contributions
for
that
to
happen.
I
think
nurturing
community
mobilizers
working
closely
with
them
to
understand
how
they
could
be
a
succession
plan.
S
If
you
are
a
community
leader,
growing,
a
community
of
say
python,
in
in
a
geography,
city
or
three
city,
you
have
to
figure
out
how
you
can
have
a
successor
as
well,
for
you
groom
them
so
that
you
don't
face
burnouts,
you
don't
face
issues
related
to
technology,
overheads
and
community
management,
etc.
So
having
a
nurtured
community
mobilizers
who
are
there
for
you
to
grow,
the
community
in
different
direction
is
super
helpful
and,
lastly,
having
a
global
connect,
invest
more
on
research,
invest
more
on
collaborations.
S
Working
with
the
communities
out
there
coming
to
events
like
satellite
would
be
super
helpful
to
connect
and
understand
what
is
going
on
on
free
and
open
source
software
ecosystem
globally.
So
investing
on
research
and
collaboration
would
be
super
helpful
when
it
comes
to
force
and
education,
especially
academic
institutions.
There
is
still
quite
dependence
on
proprietary
software
dominance
we
have
seen.
S
There
is
still
less
proliferation
of
free
and
open
source
software
in
the
early
education
of
computers,
so
what
we
are
looking
for
is
more
false,
led
curriculum,
and
we
have
started
to
see
some
early
experiments
from
this
front
where
I
t
I.t
education
in
kerala
has
improved
or
also
id
for
change
in
karnataka
is
working
to
create
curriculum
with
the
public
schools
in
karnataka
to
see
how
free
and
open
source
software
could
be
promoted
in
the
early
stages
of
learning,
computers
itself,
there's
still
limited
force
education.
S
So,
where
need
there's
a
need
for
more
forced
digital
literacy
programs.
There's
need
for
tailoring
some
of
these
programs
for
local
contacts,
local
languages
and
fossee
at
iit.
Bombay
is
doing
a
wonderful
job
of
doing
the
same
by
creating
video
repositories
in
multiple
languages,
translating
them
for
different
purposes,
for
enabling
first-time
non-english
users
of
computers
to
start
programming
in
some
of
the
popular
free
and
open
source
software.
So
please
go
and
check
it
out.
S
We
still
face
the
issue
of
poor
contribution
and
retention
in
the
community,
and
that
is
something
which
we
can
fix
by
incentivizing
research
and
innovation,
supporting
young
academic
scholars
to
do
more,
free
and
open
source
software
work
with
the
community,
enabling
them
to
figure
out
how
they
can
work
in
terms
of
incentivizing,
new
programs
for
new
researchers
to
plan
different
uptake
of
existing
fee
and
open
source
software
in
researching
on
the
needs
of
creating
new,
free
and
open
source
software,
which
would
beneficial
more
groups
in
the
country.
S
S
There
is
a
need
for
more
free
and
open
source
software,
which
can
help
us
take
knowledge,
which
is
stuck
with
certain
group
of
people
to
more
community
members
and
the
best
thing
about
free
and
open
source
software
in
education
is,
students
can
learn,
it
can
make,
it
can
break
the
software
and
we
learn
the
best
when
we
break
it
and
and
fix
it.
So
that's
the
kind
of
opportunity
we
have
with
the
more
free
and
open
source
software
based
education
infrastructure.
S
The
third
one
is
foss
and
businesses,
even
with
businesses.
There
is
a
limited
force
understanding
at
this
point.
There
is
a
need
for
conducting
more
force
workshops
for
early
group
of
people.
They,
the
early
businesses,
who
are
just
starting
off.
It's
super
beneficial
for
them
to
see
what
kind
of
softwares
are
out
there,
which
they
can
reuse
get
some
expert
help
on
licensing
get
some
expert
help
on
what
kind
of
business
models
could
be
there
for
them
to
build
on
free
and
open
source.
S
Software
also
get
some
legal
and
policy
support
as
they
grow,
because
that
helps
them
figure
out
how
they
can
do
force
on
a
sustainable
basis
and
scale
with
with
it.
Sustained
contributions.
Even
in
small
and
big
businesses
is
an
issue
fos.
S
We
need
more
force
projects
and
sponsorship
for
different
force
events,
which
are
business,
critical
mission,
critical
for
you
to
grow
so
sponsoring
events
sponsoring
community
sprints,
sponsoring
new
talent
uptake
programs
is
something
which
we
can
definitely
target
for
businesses,
because
that
would
not
just
help
the
community
but
also
help
businesses
create
more
talent
which
can
work
on
some
of
this
frost
project
and,
lastly,
having
more
community
connect,
find
opportunities
to
work
with
academia
find
opportunities
to
work
with
different
communities.
S
Governments
businesses
can
do
a
lot
by
creating
different
collaboration,
programs
and
corporate
social
responsibility
programs
to
collaborate
more
on
foss.
Lastly,
governments,
so
there
is
very
limited
first
capacity
with
most
of
the
government
staff.
At
the
moment,
what
we
can
do
is
probably
plug
some
of
the
experts
from
the
developer
communities
to
work
with
different
government
stakeholders
in
a
fellowship
model,
beat
local
or
national
or
state
level.
Governments
to
see
how
free
and
open
source
software
could
be
beneficial
for
more
number
of
people.
S
This
would,
in
turn,
reduce
the
dependence
on
commercial
software,
and
we
would
see
more
public
money
being
used
to
create
public
software
and
more
procurements.
I.T
procurements
would
have
false
first
mandate
in
them
also.
Currently,
there
are
very
few
first
repositories
from
current
different
set
of
governments,
so
encouraging
them
to
publish
more
and
working
with
them
to
fix
some
of
the
bugs
they
face
in
the
software
would
help
us
create
robots,
public
digital
services,
and
this
would
in
turn,
increase
the
reach
of
free
and
open
source
software.
S
For
some
of
the
crucial
problems
we
are
seeing,
we
saw
kobet
19
india,
a
fantastic
initiative
where
different
volunteers
came
together
overnight,
to
contribute
and
work
and
create
a
robust
platform
for
tracking
dc
spread
in
the
country,
and
now
the
vaccination
drives.
S
They
are
collaborating
data,
they're,
crowdsourcing
data
from
different
sources,
they're
collaborating
to
create
robust
digital
maps
and
scalable
mobile
applications
and
apis,
which
could
be
used
for
different
purposes
of
research
and
analysis
on
this
data.
Even
economic
survey
this
year
quoted
them
as
one
of
the
reliable
source
of
knowledge
out
there
on
covet
19
spread.
We
also
saw
iisc
bangalore,
who
recently
published
a
city
stimulator
on
how
pandemic
spread
may
happen
in
cities
like
bangalore,
see
a
vod
voice,
distribution
based
on
different
parameters.
S
We
also
saw
businesses
like
ibm,
opening
up
their
genomics
research
platform
for
faster
genomics
research
on
some
of
the
covet
vaccines,
which
are
out
there,
helping
more
academicians
and
researchers
to
work
faster
with
the
solutions
they
have.
And
lastly,
we
are
seeing
government
initiatives
like
kerala
government
working
very
closely
with
coronal
literacy
network,
which
is
a
volunteer
driven
community
network
of
open
source
literacy,
knowledge
on
corona
and
a
whole
suit
of
software,
which
is
used
as
a
currently
as
a
base
for
control
center
of
kerala
kovat
19
mission.
S
So
all
these
collaborations
are
already
happening.
We
just
need
to
scale
them
and
come
up
with
a
possible
future
where
more
stakeholders
work
together.
Thrive
together,
grow
together
and
clean
open
source
software,
and
this
is
how
it
may
look.
We
are
calling
this
as
a
national
force
alliance
powering
growth
of
india.
S
If
you
are
a
developer,
you're
hoping
to
build
more
capacity
of
younger
contributors,
activate
more
leaders
be
participate
in
leadership
program
yourselves
or
help
others
groom
their
leadership
skills
so
that
there
is
a
thriving
community
and
bring
more
diversity.
We
can't
emphasize
enough
on
that.
S
If
you
are
an
academician
who
is
looking
to
contribute
on
the
faucet
ecosystem,
you
can
improve
on
creating
better
force.
Literacy
programs
help
us
foster
more
research
on
free
and
open
source
software,
build
more
talent
to
work
on
free
and
open
source
software,
groom
them.
If
you're
businesses,
you
can
incubate
more
fast
projects,
you
can
create
a
marketplace
of
force,
alternatives
which
are
out
there.
S
You
can
advertise
the
kind
of
fast
initiatives
you
have
been
doing
so
that
more
people
can
participate
with
you
and
you
can
support
the
existing
talent
pool,
who
is
quite
interested
to
work
on
free
and
open
source
software.
If
you
are
a
government
initiative,
you
can
work
to
create
more
false
lag
projects
where
citizens
can
collaborate
with.
You
can
work
with
you
and
ensure
that
there
is
better
digital
service
delivery.
S
It's
happening
already
with
more
governments
opening
up
their
source
code,
so
it's
easy
for
them
for
other
governments
to
replicate
it
customize
it
based
on
different
needs
and,
lastly,
localize
the
deck
localize
based
on
language,
local
contacts,
etc.
So
a
lot
could
be
done
in
shaping
this
national
foss
alliance.
When
all
these
stakeholders
come
together,
work
together
with
the
shared
vision
of
shaping
india's
digital
economy
and
lastly,
this
is
the
team
who
has
worked
on
this
report.
S
I
am
very
grateful
to
all
of
them
for
sharing
their
expertise,
sharing
insights
and
doing
continuous
research
on
this
topic.
A
big
thanks
to
all
of
them-
and
here
it
is,
you
can
download
you
can
download
the
report
at
state
of
force
dot
in
explore.
The
detailed
first
timeline
did
read
more
about
different
case
studies,
these
stakeholders
and
how
you
can
play
a
major
role
in
shaping
the
fos
ecosystem.
S
All
of
it
is
out
there
for
you
to
access,
and
if
you
have
any
questions,
feel
free
to
go.
H
Thanks
a
lot
guerra,
you
know
that
was
a
that
was
a
really
interesting
overview
about
false
and
open
source
out
here
in
india.
So
there
are,
you
know
a
couple
of
questions
that
have
come
in,
but
before
that
a
reminder
to
all
of
you
that
guru
is
gonna
be
around
on
get
up
discussion.
H
So
if
you
have
any
questions
head
over
to
github
satellite.com
discussions
where
gara
will
be
taking
up
any
questions
for
the
next
30
minutes,
so
one
of
the
questions
that
came
in
gara
is
how
do
you
see
like
different
stakeholders
within
the
ecosystem,
come
together
to
shape
the
future
of
open
source
in
india?.
S
I
Great,
I
got
a
question
for
you
then
as
well.
How
can
you
strengthen
the
community
leadership
and
foster
ecosystem
in
india.
H
Great
thanks
a
lot
carol
for
sharing
some
of
those.
You
know
insights
about
false
and
open
source
out
here
in
india.
So
thank
you
so
much
for
joining
us
today
and
see
you
again
soon.
I
Has
been
absolutely
amazing,
that's
all
I
can
say
this.
Emoji
really
sums
it
up,
but
you
know
what
our
speaker
is
the
one.
Our
next
speaker
is
a
one
and
only
martin
woodward,
who
is
the
director
of
developer
relations
at
github,
and
you
probably
recognize
his
name
or
you
familiar
with
him,
because
he
hosted
the
enterprise
channel
for
universe
2020
and
I
guess
he's
our
role
model
for
how
to
host
professionally
right.
So,
oh
and
there
we
go
there,
we
have
a.
I
We
have
a
quick,
quick
clip
of
martin
goofing
off
there
having
a
little
party,
so
martin
will
be
well,
I'm
not
going
to
ruin
anything,
but
I'm
just
going
to
toss
it
straight
over
to
martin
martin.
Are
you
there?
Can
you
hear
us
from
the
party
where
you're
at
hey
martin.
H
H
T
Hey
everybody
thanks
for
that
fantastic,
welcome,
yeah
and
thanks
everybody
as,
as
he
said,
I'm
martin
woodward,
I'm
the
director
of
variations
here
at
gil
and
it's
my
absolute
pleasure
to
be
able
to
wrap
up
what's
been
a
truly
fantastic
day
for
us
all.
I've
been
in
since
about
four
o'clock
this
morning,
I'm
based
in
the
uk
here.
It's
now
7
a.m
live,
and
so
I
want
to
say
thank
you
to
everybody.
T
You
know
thanks
to
the
wonderful
host
for
keeping
us
company
during
the
day
today
to
anisha
and
karon
on
the
open
source
channel
and
then
divio
mohit
over
on
the
devops
channel
rocking
some
fantastic
headwear.
I
have
to
say
sorry
my
my
head's
looking
particularly
bare
today,
but
there
we
go
and
thanks
for
joining
us.
You
know
we
really
really
really
do
appreciate
the
time
and
also
the
welcome
you've
given
github
here
in
india
when
we
opened
the
office
just
over
a
year
ago.
T
You
know
we
really
really
felt
the
the
love
of
the
india
developer
community
and
that's
only
grown
as
we've
been
growing.
Our
engineering
team
in
india
as
well
and
that's
you
know,
despite
everything,
that's
been
going
on
over
the
past
12
months,
the
challenges
we've
all
had
to
face
getting
used
to
our
new
ways
of
working.
So
thank
you
very
much
for
joining
us
online
and
also
thank
you
for
sharing
your
octocats
with
us.
If
you
you've
been
people
been
heading
over
to
myoctocat.com,
sharing
their
octocats
on
social
media.
T
So
thanks
for
doing
that,
I
brought
some
of
them
in
here.
Live
that
got
shared
in
the
past
couple
of
hours
and
thanks
for
joining
us
over
in
discussions.
I
was
just
over
in
there
this
morning.
Some
great
questions,
some
great
discussions
happening
and
people
just
saying,
hi
and
introducing
themselves
as
well.
So
thanks
to
you
know
this
great
and
being
part
of
this
great
github
community,
it's
really
it's
been
a
real
pleasure.
Today.
The
gate
of
india
community
has
really
been
growing
over
the
past
year.
T
As
erica
said
this
morning,
1.8
million
developers
have
joined
us
in
the
community
here
in
india.
That's
just
insane
numbers
is
so.
Thank
you
very
very
much.
This
is
the
equivalent
to
a
developer
in
india,
creating
their
first
repo
every
30
seconds.
So
while
I've
been
jibber,
jabbering
on
people
been
creating
repos
and
it's
every
single
30
seconds,
and
it's
not
just
people
using
github
for
work
either.
It's
as
erica
said
this
morning.
T
India
is
now
the
fastest
growing
open
source
contributor
in
the
world,
so
everybody
in
india
has
been
contributing
massively
and
the
potential
for
india
and
indian
developers
to
positively
impact
the
world
is
unbelievable,
as
we
saw
in
the
covid
session
earlier
on
talking
about
the
impact
for
good
there,
and
also
just
thanks
to
all
the
amazing
open
source
contributions
that
are
making
the
world
a
better
place.
T
We're
proud
to
host
a
growing
collection
of
projects
that
are
built
in
or
receiving
significant
contributions
from
india.
If
you
visit
our
maiden
india
collection
on
github,
you
can
learn
more
that's
github.com
collection
made
in
india
and,
if
you're,
a
maintainer
of
a
project
in
india,
we'd
love
to
feature
your
project
on
this
list.
T
So
if
you
head
on
over
to
that
address
there,
and
you
can
send
a
pull
request
in
to
add
your
project
into
this
list
today,
please
do
we
would
love
to
feature
you,
and
you
can
also
tell
us
about
your
project
in
discussions
if
you
want
or
if
you
want
to
get
some
feedback
or
anything
else
like
that,
I'd
love
to
love,
to
listen
it
now
with
india,
as
erica
mentioned,
to
help
support
these
projects.
T
Erica
also
announced
the
github
grants
for
open
source,
and
this
is
a
brand
new
program
that
you
can
learn
about
in
in
that
in
the
same
discussions
repo,
you
can
learn
about
the
program
there
and
it
offers
grants
for
a
total
or
some
of
10
million
rupees
to
open
source
maintainers
to
support
their
work,
as
they
continue
to
build
world-class
software.
T
That
really
makes
an
impact
for
india,
but
across
the
world,
and
open
source
projects
based
out
of
india,
we'll
be
able
to
apply
and
we're
using
working
with
some
representatives
from
academia
from
the
software
industry,
as
well
as
from
within
github,
to
select
the
grant
recipients.
I'm
really
glad
that
we're
launching
this
program
as
well.
I
just
can't
you
know,
I'm
really
looking
forward
to
seeing
the
impact
that
the
recipients
are
able
to
have
with
this
additional
financial
support
that
we're
providing.
T
What's
cool
what's
happening
if
you've,
your
favorite,
open
source
project
has
had
a
major
release,
then
be
sure
to
let
us
know
by
tagging
it
with
gh
release
radar
or
by
sending
it
to
github
on
twitter
and
we've
just
got
this
fantastic
community
and
that's
what
we've
seen
today
and
that's
what
you
know
despite
us
all
being
remote,
despite
it's
all
coming
from
the
different
locations
around
the
world,
it's
just
fantastic
to
see
this
community
come
together,
but
especially
in
india.
T
Over
the
past
year,
we've
launched
a
new
program,
as
eric
mentioned,
to
highlight
the
fantastic
leader
in
leaders
in
our
communities.
We
call
that
the
the
github
stars
program
and
the
github
stars
program
exists
to
lift
up
people
who
inspire,
who
educate
you
nurture
in
your
communities.
You
know
you
always
see
these
people
they're
the
people
who
are
always
volunteering,
always
stepping
up
and
really
driving
communities.
T
There
are
a
fantastic
group
of
people
across
the
world,
who've
been
incredibly
active
in
building
local
communities
and
helping
online
and
helping
others
as
well,
and
I'm
very
pleased
to
say
two
of
our
stars
who
are
indian
stars
been
presenting
here
at
satellite.
We
had
santosh
on
earlier
and
then
nicholas
is
running
a
workshop.
Where
is
if
you
haven't
signed
up
for
the
workshops?
T
Actually,
if
you
want
to
head
on
over,
the
space
is
quite
limited,
but
remember
that
all
money
for
the
workshops,
all
the
money
raised-
is
going
to
local
charities
in
india
as
well
and,
as
I
say,
nishka
she's
going
to
be
presenting
one
of
those
workshops.
T
And
if
you
know
someone
in
your
local
community,
someone
in
your
developer
community,
that's
using
github
to
help
other
developers
and
help
people
learn
to
help
people
get
better
and
raise
up
through
get
better
as
open
source
contributors
or
as
developers.
And
if
you
think,
they've
got
what
it
takes
to
be
a
star,
then
please
visit
stars.gable.com
to
nominate
them.
It's
a
it's,
a
small,
very
exclusive
group
of
them,
really
some
of
the
most
inspirational
people
in
the
community
that
we've
got.
T
You
know
over
56
million
developers,
but
we
are
adding
new
people
every
week.
So
let
us
know
who's
a
star
in
your
eyes:
that'd
be
fantastic,
and
one
of
the
things
to
do
that.
Our
stars
do
a
lot
of
is
to
educate
and
sort
of
share
their
knowledge,
and
so,
as
we
start
to
open
back
up
over
the
next
year,
if
you're
hosting
an
in-person
meetup
around
github
then
do
reach
out
to
us
in
discussions.
T
We'd
love
to
send
you
some
stickers
to
hand
out
see
how
else
we
can
help
and
remember
that
we've
got
our
virtual
meet
up
for
engine
developers
which
streams
live
or
you
can
catch
replays
on
youtube,
and
that
happens.
You
know
regularly
it's
not
just
satellite
india.
We
have
these
regular
virtual
meetups
as
well,
where
you
can,
where
you
can
get
in
contact
with
local
developers,
so
be
sure
to
stick
around
after
these
virtual
meetups
and
there's
lots
of
great
conversation
happening
as
well.
T
I'm
always
just
completely
blown
away
by
the
the
energy
and
the
passion
that
the
students
in
india
have
in
supporting
open
source
in
using
github
and
just
you
know,
really
participating
in
the
community.
It's
fantastic
to
see
and
there's
obviously
such
an
amazing
future
coming
up
through
the
that
community.
T
So
you
can,
just
you
know,
really
feel
the
passion
for
hunger
and
learning
as
well.
It's
just
amazing
one
of
things,
that's
also
been
great
to
see
is
that
the
faculty,
the
academic
staff
in
india
have
been
some
of
the
most
responsive
in
the
world,
actually
in
terms
of
helping
their
students,
get
the
skills
for
jobs
and
also
learn
how
to
contribute
into
open
source.
T
In
the
last
year
alone,
we've
had
more
than
100
higher
education
institutions
join
github's
education
programs
and
also
that's
been
supported
by
an
amazing
74
volunteer
campus
experts
in
india.
In
the
student
body,
there
are
well
over
a
hundred
thousand
students
now
signed
up
to
our
educational
programs
and
with
the
campus
program,
students
across
many
of
india's
higher
education
institutions
have
access
to
github's
full
product
suites,
as
throughout
their
time
as
students.
T
The
student
ecosystem
is
incredibly
important
to
the
continued
growth
and
pace
of
innovation
in
india
and,
as
I
say,
it's
just
such
a
bright
future.
Looking
ahead
of
us
there
as
we
look
towards
that
that
community
and
the
more
we
can
do
to
equip
them
as
developers
as
innovators.
The
solution
builders
of
tomorrow,
the
brighter
our
future's
gonna,
look,
which
is
why
we
have
the
the
github
student
pack
and
if
you're
a
student
in
india
and
you're
not
already
familiar
with
it,
be
sure
to
check
it
out.
T
The
pack
contains
over
14
million
rupees
worth
of
free
software
and
services
to
help
every
student
developer,
so
not
just
from
github
but
from
partners
and
and
other
people
that
we
work
with.
So
if
you
head
on
over
to
education.guild.com
forward
slash
pack-
and
you
can
learn
all
about-
learn
more
and
learn
how
to
get
qualified
for
the
student
developer
pack
and
then
when
you're
starting
to
get
you
know
looking
at
getting
some
work
experience.
This
is
something
my
own
eldest
son
is
doing.
T
Right
now
is
he's
thinking
about
going
from
education
into
the
workforce.
Erica
also
announced
the
github
india
externship
program
this
morning,
and
this
builds
on
top
of
github's
campus
experts
by
offering
participation
participating
students
a
unique
opportunity
to
work
with
some
of
the
leading
companies
in
india
and
get
hands-on
development
experience
outside
of
the
classroom.
The
program
offers
three
months
paid:
externship
to
open
source
projects
in
partners
in
partnership
with
tech
companies,
and
in
return
these
top
tech
companies
get
to
start
building
relationships
with
developers.
T
They
may
want
to
hire
when
they
graduate
and
also
help
make
sure
open
source
is
getting
the
contributions
that
it
needs
to
be
supported.
The
gear
of
india
externship
program,
you
know,
really
helps
connect
the
dots
between
open
source,
the
next
generation
of
software
developers
and
successful
and
growing
companies
so
definitely
check
that
out.
If
that's
of
interest
right.
So,
let's
look
at
what's
coming
up
tomorrow,
we've
got
a
brilliant
day,
lined
up
for
us
tomorrow
and
loads
and
loads
of
great
content.
T
Did
you
know
that
we've
shipped
over
a
hundred
features
to
get
up
in
the
past
six
months?
We're
shipping
features
every
single
day.
Tomorrow
morning
my
boss,
shanku,
will
be
joining
us
with
the
caster
characters
from
across
the
entire
company
and
the
entire
globe
and
joining
you
here
and
he's
going
to
take
us
on
this
demo
pack
session.
I
think
there's
only
about
six
minutes
of
talking.
T
The
rest
of
the
time
is
just
all
demos,
where
we're
going
to
go
all
the
way
through
github
showing
you
all
the
latest
features,
including
one
or
two
brand
new
features
that
will
get
their
first
exclusive
look
tomorrow
morning.
For
you
in
the
keynote
session
first
thing
tomorrow
morning,
it
promises
to
be
a
fantastic
session,
definitely
worth
tuning
in
for
and
actually
straight
after
that
session,
we'll
be
splitting
back
into
the
two
channels.
Again,
I'm
a
good
friend
of
vp
he's
a
vp
of
software
engineering.
T
Sanjay
mulphani
he's
going
to
be
joining
us
from
hyderabad
to
talk
about
the
work
the
github
engineering
team
are
doing
here
in
india
and
the
work
they
do
and
some
of
the
lessons
they've
learned
along
the
way
and
we've
all
had
fantastic
sessions.
You
know
dr
varelsa,
the
co-founder
of
julie
computing
is
going
to
be
talking.
T
One
of
my
friends,
shashank
vasal
is
going
to
be
talking
about
github
actions
and
that's
and
then
my
my
good
friend
mitch
manners
will
be
joining
us
live
from
australia
to
tell
you
how
to
get
up
like
a
boss.
So
definitely
check
that
section
out
and
just
like
today,
the
open
source
track
will
have
a
bunch
of
lightning
talks.
T
Some
things
like
tensorflow
kubernetes
emma
lots
using
github
all
that
sort
of
stuff
so
definitely
check
that
out
and
remember
it
promises
to
be
a
fantastic
day,
but
you
can
get
started
on
github.com
for
free
right
now:
it's
free
to
developers
and
teams
of
any
size
for
private
projects,
as
well
as
for
open
source
projects.
So,
if
you're
learning
to
code,
if
your
country
reaches
open
source
or
if
you're
starting
a
new
private
project
or
startup,
you
can
do
that
on
github
for
free
today,
right.
Okay,
that's
enough
for
joining
me
for
this
quick
wrap-up!
T
So
thanks
very
much.
I
hope
you
enjoyed
getting
using
github
as
much
as
we
enjoy
building
it.
I'm
going
to
head
back
over
into
discussions
right
now,
so
you
can
join
us
and
ask
questions
in
the
chat
down
there.
But
in
the
meantime,
thank
you
very
much
for
joining
us
today
and
I'm
looking
forward
to
seeing
you
tomorrow
take
care.
J
H
Wow,
that
is
such
a
nice
wrap-up.
You
know,
martin
almost
made
a
lot
of
the
stuff
easier
for
us,
giving
a
complete
run-through
of
what's
coming
up
for
tomorrow
and
a
whole
lot
of
things
right
so
anisha.
I
still
can't
believe
that
we're
almost
done
for
the
day
we
are
actually
done
for
the
day.
H
You
know
so
much
of
so
much
of
really
nice
talk,
so
many
different
experiences
and
stories
and
a
lot
of
stuff
right
so
for
all
of
you
tuning
in
remember
that
there's
more
coming
up
tomorrow
in
the
open
source
and
devops
channel,
as
well
so
head
on
over
to
getupsatellite.com
schedule
to
take
a
look
at
what's
coming
up
for
tomorrow,
so
anisha
what's
coming
up,
I
know
martin
mentioned
a
whole
lot
of
things,
but
what's
in
store.
I
So
we
have
some
hot
sessions.
I've
been
waiting
to
use
this
emoji
for
a
long
time,
but
on
the
open
source
channel.
We
have
you
know
sessions
like
building
julia
in
the
open
crossing,
the
border
of
languages
and
state
of
ui
ux
in
open
source
as
well
and
on
our
other
channel
on
the
devops
channel.
We
have
sessions
like
create
your
own
github
apps
and
actions,
email,
ops,
using
github
and
how
github
uses
github
for
collaboration
as
well.
I
So
you
don't
really
you
don't
want
to
miss
any
of
their
sessions,
so
I'm
very
excited
about
that.
But
current
there's
also
workshops
as
well
right.
H
Yes,
that's
right,
you
know
there
are.
There
are
hands-on
workshops
as
well
happening
with
experts
from
github
as
well
as
from
the
community.
So
if
you
have
already
signed
up,
the
workshops
are
gonna
start
at
3
p.m.
Today,
as
well
as
tomorrow,
so
there
are
four
workshops,
that's
happening
so
go
check
it
out.
If
you
have
already
signed
up,
do
tune
in
and
then
get
some
hands-on
experience
on
a
whole
lot
of
topics
like
actions,
security
collaborations
code,
spaces
etc
as
well.
I
Yes-
and
I
just
can't
wait
for
it
so
very
excited-
see
you
all
tomorrow,
looking
forward
to
it,
take
care.